Criticism > Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism > Mishima, Yukio - Andrew R. Smith (essay date April 1989)
Mishima, Yukio - Andrew R. Smith (essay date April 1989)
Andrew R. Smith (essay date April 1989)
SOURCE: Smith, Andrew R. “Seeing through a Mask's Confession.” Text and Performance Quarterly 9, no. 2 (April 1989): 135-52.
[In the following essay, Smith examines Mishima's revelation and concealment in Confessions of a Mask.]
Confessions of a Mask (Kamen no Kokuhaku) was written in Japan just after World War II and is ostensibly an autobiographical account of Yukio Mishima's youth. The title already suggests an opposition between what one authentically expresses and what one surreptitiously constructs for public perception, and in reading we are confronted with questions concerning our own habitual notions of truth and deception. How is a mask capable of confession? Should we believe what we hear if what we perceive is not a human face? What are the criteria for understanding the difference (and/or similarity) between the assumptions of truth in confession and deception in the...
[The entire page is 11266 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- Principal Works
-
Criticism
- Sanroku Yoshida (essay date summer 1983)
- Stephen Chan (essay date September 1985)
- Dan P. McAdams (essay date fall 1985)
- Alphonso Lingis (essay date 1987)
- David W. Atkinson (essay date winter 1989)
- Andrew R. Smith (essay date April 1989)
- Hosea Hirata (essay date 1990)
- Sascha Talmor (essay date July 1991)
- Shira Nayman (essay date spring 1992)
- Gabriele Schwab (essay date summer 1992)
- Reiko Tachibana Nemoto (essay date summer 1993)
- Michael Thomas Carroll (essay date 1993)
- Alice H. Hutton (essay date 1993)
- Donald H. Mengay (essay date 1995)
- Dennis Washburn (essay date 1997)
- Marjorie Rhine (essay date summer 1999)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
