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The Izu Dancer and Other Stories (1974)

von Yasunari Kawabata, Yasushi Inoue

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From the winner of the 1968 Nobel Prize, this collection includes The izu dancer. Yasushi Inoue, widely recognised as one of Japan's most distinguished writers, provides a further three stories to the collection.
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I read one of the stories, Obasute, by Yasushi Inoue on 24 Feb 24. The writing is spare, stripped of excessive description. I suppose it could be a story about people who want out of their lives, and includes a couple of examples from the narrator's family who have left what would be considered successful lives for new lives that aren't really successful, but where they have more freedom to be themselves. On the surface, it's about a man's obsession with an ancient Japanese legend where people who reach the age of 70 are taken to a mountain, Obasute, and abandoned. Overall, the story evokes a feeling of loneliness and abandonment. ( )
  janoorani24 | Feb 27, 2024 |
The first story in this collection of four short stories “The Izu Dancer" so affected me that I was slow to continue reading this book. The protagonist is dressed as a student, but it’s not stated. His psychological and social state suggest that instead of being a student, he might be a Rounin - one who failed to pass the college entrance exams. He is infatuated with the little dancer, who, seems to be pre-teen. He manages to fall in with her dancing troupe, and as he travels with them, we learn of the cultural prejudice against traveling dancers - their status is similar to that of gypsies.

Communal bathing was common in that culture, so the following is beautifully understated: "An hour or so later they all went down for a bath. I must come along they insisted; but the idea of a bath with three young women was somewhat overwhelming, and I said I would go in later. In a moment the little dancer came back upstairs."
"Chiyoko says she'll wash your back if you come down now."
(The Izu Dancer and Other Stories, Tuttle, 1954, 1969, page 19)

The following three short stories are by Yasushi Inoue and were preceded by an interesting six page introduction that connects Inoue to the stories.

“The Counterfeiter” I was kept in suspense waiting for the other shoe to drop.

“Obasute” An examination of feelings towards his parents and towards old age. As fiction, it includes some surprises.

“The Full Moon” Another short story with suspense just around the corner. It gives hints of the machinations that go on inside a corporation.

The printing that I have has a different cover, but the publisher and the number of pages match the edition that I am reviewing. I have the nineteenth printing, 1996 ( )
  bread2u | Jul 1, 2020 |
an odd collection of translated short stories from Tuttle, with one written by Yasunari Kawabata followed by three from Yasushi Inoue. Kawabata is one of my favourite writers ever; his delicate and unstated social transactions between parties speaks very little of the emotions governing the principals, but dwells on every gesture, every hesitation, every observation until the reader becomes a third party to every transaction, and the meaning is contained in what is never said. add this to the Japanese tendency in such stories, describing an old Japan hardly aware of yet colliding with the new before and after 1945, never to let the authorial voice in any way summarize or interpret the relationships, and every story becomes a painting of spare figures in a naturalistic world, a momentary breeze rippling a pond. allusive, evocative, burrowing into the ma concept of time and space that in these stories cannot quite be caught in the moment of meeting.

and this way of working at the world can come as a shock to the western mind, which wants the author to supply more hints about both what happened and what it meant. very subtle, this stuff, and plainly producing art. but also it describes context and complexity in very different formal terms - as a series of japanese tea ceremonies, say, deconstructed - that hardly seem to register on the page, yet become indelible in the mind's eye long after the story has been set aside. here the written story displays as art, composed with a calligraphic brush on a ricepaper page. which in general terms conveys beauty, runs an metaphysical expense account, and radiates solitude. but the meaning has been left for the reader to decipher.

Inoue, whom i had not read before, approaches his similar subjects a little differently, owing apparently to his own cast of mind. somewhat younger than Kawabata, with the same poetic pen but with more of a detail-oriented temperament, he tells stories that seem at first glance to be more matter-of-fact, but are not necessarily about what they seem to be about. consider his lead subject in "The Counterfeiter", a man who seems mere background detail in a story about an artist, until the biographer narrator seizes on him while trying to straighten out the detail of the artist's life for a biographical intro to his work. as he proceeds, there are any number of facts to find, yet they can hardly all be crammed into one tidy chronological narrative. he is compelled to become a detective. the timeline originally seems straightforward, but in the field he finds it difficult to straighten out the kink. how will he resolve these difficulties in order to continue? and do we as readers come to the same private conclusions about what the story means? the artist may not be the artist. there are questions of authenticity. yet neither the poet-writer nor the narrator really live in a world which sets out to solve such mysteries, so instead it's the nature of the encounters between the two principals that matters and yet cannot be altogether authenticated. none of this is ever stated, but between the straightforward account of the search and the unknowable truth behind it, there is a gap, creating a texture to the work that is simple yet very dense. very like, perhaps, what an artist does with pigment.

and so every story is painted onto a ricepaper scroll, rolled up by the writer and then unrolled by the reader. but beware, there is no gloss available for all the beyond that is buried on the page. and with both authors, the stage, every meeting, is set in the natural world, which holds a lot of the emotion that is not otherwise expressed. welcome to the ground of the japanese school of painting, literature, philosophy. there is a setting (here: mountains), time passes (in both directions), there are two people, there is a moment. but do they ever really meet? profound changes can occur if they do, but the tableau itself does not record much movement. every encounter is all built from allusion, down to the tiniest detail. yet bells are ringing somewhere in that empty sky. ( )
3 abstimmen macha | Oct 13, 2016 |
A book of short stories that offers a sampling of two great writers, Yasunari Kawabata and Yasushi Inoue.

The title story, The Izu Dancer is by Kawabata and is about a small troupe of traveling performers and a student infatuated with their young drummer girl. A beautiful little piece.

Inoue's contributions include The Counterfeiter, Obasute, and The Full Moon. All three stories deal with separation, loneliness, and alienation. Inoue takes the isolation, the loneliness of the character... a minor chord... and strokes it into the beautiful riff of nature. If he were a musician, he'd be singing the blues... with a smile as he looked out in his mind's eye over the mountains in the early autumn.

Kawabata is no stranger to me and I love his work. Inoue is fast becoming my newest friend in reading. ( )
3 abstimmen Banoo | Sep 7, 2009 |
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» Andere Autoren hinzufügen (7 möglich)

AutorennameRolleArt des AutorsWerk?Status
Yasunari KawabataHauptautoralle Ausgabenberechnet
Inoue, YasushiHauptautoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Picon, LeonÜbersetzerCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
Seidensticker, EdwardÜbersetzerCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
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The is a completely different work from " The Dancing Girl of Izu and Other Stories". The other stories included here are, in fact, all by Yasushi Inoue and are: The Counterfeiter; Obasute; The Full Moon.
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From the winner of the 1968 Nobel Prize, this collection includes The izu dancer. Yasushi Inoue, widely recognised as one of Japan's most distinguished writers, provides a further three stories to the collection.

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