Criticism > Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism > Mishima, Yukio - Stephen Chan (essay date September 1985)
Mishima, Yukio - Stephen Chan (essay date September 1985)
Stephen Chan (essay date September 1985)
SOURCE: Chan, Stephen. “Mishima—Against a Political Interpretation.” Contemporary Review (September 1985): 133-35.
[In the following essay, Chan argues that Mishima concerned himself more with culture than with politics.]
Fifteen years ago the Japanese writer, Yukio Mishima, died after an abortive coup attempt. This year, Paul Schrader's film of his life has been released. Already the subject of controversy, the film depicts Mishima's death not as a political one but as an indigenous expression of values—a statement of authentic culture in which the right-wing political label was incidental.
At first glance there appears some truth in this approach. Left-wing Japanese radicals have seemed as morbidly inclined and more violent than Mishima. The Japanese Red Army caused great bloodshed, and its members lived by a spartan discipline which almost mocked Mishima's. Critics of Mishima's...
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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)
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