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Mort et vie de mishima (1974)

par Henry Scott Stokes

Autres auteurs: Yukio Mishima (Contributeur)

Autres auteurs: Voir la section autres auteur(e)s.

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Novelist, playwright, film actor, martial artist, and political commentator, Yukio Mishima (1925-1970) was arguably the most famous person in Japan at the time of his death. Henry Scott Stokes, one of Mishima's closest friends, was the only non-Japanese allowed to attend the trial of the men involved in Mishima's spectacular suicide. In this insightful and empathetic look at the writer, Stokes guides the reader through the milestones of Mishima's meteoric and eclectic career and delves into the artist's major works and themes. This biography skillfully and compassionately illuminates the achievements and disquieting ideas of a brilliant and deeply troubled man, an artist of whom Nobel Laureate Yasunari Kawabata had said, "A writer of Mishima's caliber comes along only once every two or three hundred years."… (plus d'informations)
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» Voir aussi les 12 mentions

[five stars for the photos] ( )
  alison-rose | May 22, 2023 |
Of the two standard biographies of Mishima, this is the one written by someone who met and interviewed him.

I've no interest whatsoever in either Mishima or his works, but I met both Scott-Stokes and his first wife, so I thought I'd give the book a try. It proved useful as a reference work for a course I offered in the Modern Japanese Novel. ( )
  skirret | Jan 2, 2015 |
Stokes and Mishima were pals, and he was the only foreign journalist present at Mishima’s death, so of course it was irresistible for him to write a book like this one. It’s mixed—really good on his personal memories of partying with Yukio, his creepy huh-huh-huh laugh and physical traits, and impressions of the man’s complex psychology and pathologies (the treatment of Mishima’s homosexuality is to a certain degree couched in the language of its era but Stokes has nothing to prove in re his own lady-oriented virility) and how they fit into his worldview of blood and Eros; and how that was manifested in his writing and the worldbeating ambitions he had for that writing, ultimately unfulfilled; and how that fits into his bodybuilding obsession and desire to die at the height of his magnificence; and how that fits into his belief that Japan had had too much “chrysanthemum” and not enough “sword” since the end of the War; and how that fits into his fixation on and vicarious identification with the Emperor (like a Holy Ghost to Mishima! If two people love each other, the Emperor is the third leg in the tripod of their love, the one who gives it meaning); and how that meshes with the motives behind the formation of his Tatenokai or “shield society”; and how it all came together into his final clownish/majestic coup attempt and seppuku.

That’s actually a lot of things Stokes is good on, looking at the list, but much of the book is taken up by insight-light reportage on Mishima’s early life (he was dressed as a girl by his grandma and was humiliated when they rejected him from the Imperial Japanese Army as whatever their equivalent of a 4F was) and sort of plot-summary-level literary analysis (though Mishima’s plots and structures are often better than his characters, so this part was enjoyable and gave me reading ideas even if it didn’t seem to have a tonne put into it. Also, he convincingly reads The Sea of Fertility as a skeleton key to Mishima’s progressive disenchantment with the richness of living, in which he had previously, theatrically, as-though-watching-himself-in-the-mirrorly indulged, and his erotic embrace of death-worship alongside Emperor-worship—though only of a sort, always only of a sort with Mishima).

Ultimately Stokes comes back around to the suicide, which he opens by treating in an as-it-happens journalistic way and closes by casting as a kind of detective story: why did he do it? All of the above matters come into it, but Stokes embraces the theory that the x-factor was a secret sexual relationship between Mishima and Masakatsu Morita, his second-in-command in the Tatenokai, and that Morita was the one who pushed the dilettantish Mishima, who treated the society somewhat as his toy (Stokes’s description of romping around Mt. Fuji with the boys on their “field exercises” is unforgettable), to step up to what Morita with his dazzled eyes saw as the great man’s destiny. (Morita also killed his putative lover, serving as the second to his seppuku, and then killed himself.) It’s plausible in the light of what retroactively seems like a gathering of evidence on the bizarre happenings of that day, and I recommend it to anyone who’s ever read Mishima and come away wondering what for fuck’s sake was roiling and boiling inside this man. ( )
3 voter MeditationesMartini | Jun 22, 2014 |
El 25 de junio de 1970 Mishima se hizo el harakiri en un cuartel militar de Tokio. Solo tenía 45 años y llevaba una vida de ensueño: celebridad, dinero, mujer, hijos.
Un grande de la literatura. ( )
  pedrolopez | Apr 10, 2014 |
Fairly sympathetic but not unquestioningly adulatory account of Mishima by a western writer who knew him personally. ( )
  antiquary | Dec 29, 2007 |
5 sur 5
"Both biographies are good books -- well worth reading even for those not particularly interested in Japanese literature. For Mishima the man suggests a psychological paradigm which has its counterpart in other cultures."
ajouté par GYKM | modifierNew York Times, Harold Clurman (Dec 29, 1974)
 
"The book is humane, intelligent, and probably as close as a Western reader is likely to get to the subject.... A literate examination of the man's work."
ajouté par GYKM | modifierTime
 

» Ajouter d'autres auteur(e)s (8 possibles)

Nom de l'auteurRôleType d'auteurŒuvre ?Statut
Henry Scott Stokesauteur principaltoutes les éditionscalculé
Mishima, YukioContributeurauteur secondairetoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Miyazawa, EijiPhotographeauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé
Trapero, SteveConcepteur de la couvertureauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé
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Novelist, playwright, film actor, martial artist, and political commentator, Yukio Mishima (1925-1970) was arguably the most famous person in Japan at the time of his death. Henry Scott Stokes, one of Mishima's closest friends, was the only non-Japanese allowed to attend the trial of the men involved in Mishima's spectacular suicide. In this insightful and empathetic look at the writer, Stokes guides the reader through the milestones of Mishima's meteoric and eclectic career and delves into the artist's major works and themes. This biography skillfully and compassionately illuminates the achievements and disquieting ideas of a brilliant and deeply troubled man, an artist of whom Nobel Laureate Yasunari Kawabata had said, "A writer of Mishima's caliber comes along only once every two or three hundred years."

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