Death By water
By Kenzaburo Oe
Oe is arguably Japan's greatest living author. Born in 1935
he was awarded the Nobel prize for literature in 1994. Death by Water is said
to be his last novel but given the longevity of pre-war Japanese one would be
wise not to bet on it.
In Death by Water Oe has gives us another iteration
of his alter ego Kogito Choko. Like Oe himself, Kogito Choko is from rural
Shikoku, had a father who died in a flood at the end of the war, attended the
elite Tokyo University, and has spent his entire career as a novelist. Those
who have read The Changeling which was published in 2014 will be
familiar with the context. Apparently there are at least another six novels
which deal with this same character, most of which are not available in English.
The novel is about Kogito Choko's attempt to write a novel
about his father who drowned in a flooded river towards the end of the Second
World War. The novel is to be a kind of
summation of his life's work. To this
end he revisits his old home in Shikoku where his mother has kept a suitcase
full of documents about his father. While there, his sister organises a series
of is interviews by a theatre director who wishes to write a play about Kogito
Choko's final novel. The director is accompanied by his theatre collective
including his spunky assistant Unaiko and they workshop the play as Choko is
interviewed. The interviews and play become a device to interrogate Choko's and
by extension, Oe's obsessions and
recurrent themes. It's a bit like Oe, or is it Choko, is getting in first with
the ultimate primer to understanding Oe or is it Choko's oeuvre.
At this point the solipsism of the whole exercise could
become a bit hard to take.
But Oe is playing a long game and the novel gently drifts
away from the writing project to focus on Choko's relationships with his
disabled adult son Akari, his wife Chikashi, her dead brother Goro (in real
life - perhaps that should be in inverted commas - this was Juzo Itami, the
director of Tampopo) and Unaiko, who has some dark secrets of her own.
The narrative drive is provided by a new theatre project Unaiko persuades Choko
to assist with; one that opens up old wounds.
The point is that the whole series of these Choko novels
repeat and recombine and tinker with more
or less the same constellation of elements. The Changeling was also
partly about Choko/Oe's youth in Shikoku and his father's untimely death but in
that novel his father dies in a farcical right wing uprising against the
occupation.
And remember, the protagonist of this novel is a novelist ie
a professional liar so be careful whom you believe. In the end the novel is
searingly honest about the way in which one man seeks to construct and
reconstruct his identity, even as he faces his own mortality.
No comments:
Post a Comment