Cinque prose inedite in Italia di uno dei maggiori scrittori giapponesi del Novecento e uno dei testimoni più; rappresentativi di quell’epoca di transizione dai vecchi valori tradizionali a quelli “nuovi” provenienti dall’occidente.
«Oggi, che sono trascorse alcune migliaia di anni, quest’anima, passata attraverso infinite vicissitudini, ha dovuto dare di nuovo vita ad un uomo. Essa dimora in me. Per questo, nato come sono nel nostro tempo, non riesco a fare nessun lavoro che abbia un senso.»
Akutagawa Ryūnosuke (芥川 龍之介) was one of the first prewar Japanese writers to achieve a wide foreign readership, partly because of his technical virtuosity, partly because his work seemed to represent imaginative fiction as opposed to the mundane accounts of the I-novelists of the time, partly because of his brilliant joining of traditional material to a modern sensibility, and partly because of film director Kurosawa Akira's masterful adaptation of two of his short stories for the screen.
Akutagawa was born in the Kyōbashi district Tokyo as the eldest son of a dairy operator named Shinbara Toshizō and his wife Fuku. He was named "Ryūnosuke" ("Dragon Offshoot") because he was born in the Year of the Dragon, in the Month of the Dragon, on the Day of the Dragon, and at the Hour of the Dragon (8 a.m.). Seven months after Akutagawa's birth, his mother went insane and he was adopted by her older brother, taking the Akutagawa family name. Despite the shadow this experience cast over Akutagawa's life, he benefited from the traditional literary atmosphere of his uncle's home, located in what had been the "downtown" section of Edo.
At school Akutagawa was an outstanding student, excelling in the Chinese classics. He entered the First High School in 1910, striking up relationships with such classmates as Kikuchi Kan, Kume Masao, Yamamoto Yūzō, and Tsuchiya Bunmei. Immersing himself in Western literature, he increasingly came to look for meaning in art rather than in life. In 1913, he entered Tokyo Imperial University, majoring in English literature. The next year, Akutagawa and his former high school friends revived the journal Shinshichō (New Currents of Thought), publishing translations of William Butler Yeats and Anatole France along with original works of their own. Akutagawa published the story Rashōmon in the magazine Teikoku bungaku (Imperial Literature) in 1915. The story, which went largely unnoticed, grew out of the egoism Akutagawa confronted after experiencing disappointment in love. The same year, Akutagawa started going to the meetings held every Thursday at the house of Natsume Sōseki, and thereafter considered himself Sōseki's disciple.
The lapsed Shinshichō was revived yet again in 1916, and Sōseki lavished praise on Akutagawa's story Hana (The Nose) when it appeared in the first issue of that magazine. After graduating from Tokyo University, Akutagawa earned a reputation as a highly skilled stylist whose stories reinterpreted classical works and historical incidents from a distinctly modern standpoint. His overriding themes became the ugliness of human egoism and the value of art, themes that received expression in a number of brilliant, tightly organized short stories conventionally categorized as Edo-mono (stories set in the Edo period), ōchō-mono (stories set in the Heian period), Kirishitan-mono (stories dealing with premodern Christians in Japan), and kaika-mono (stories of the early Meiji period). The Edo-mono include Gesaku zanmai (A Life Devoted to Gesaku, 1917) and Kareno-shō (Gleanings from a Withered Field, 1918); the ōchō-mono are perhaps best represented by Jigoku hen (Hell Screen, 1918); the Kirishitan-mono include Hokōnin no shi (The Death of a Christian, 1918), and kaika-mono include Butōkai(The Ball, 1920).
Akutagawa married Tsukamoto Fumiko in 1918 and the following year left his post as English instructor at the naval academy in Yokosuka, becoming an employee of the Mainichi Shinbun. This period was a productive one, as has already been noted, and the success of stories like Mikan (Mandarin Oranges, 1919) and Aki (Autumn, 1920) prompted him to turn his attention increasingly to modern materials. This, along with the introspection occasioned by growing health and nervous problems, resulted in a series of autobiographically-based stories known as Yasukichi-mono, after the name of the main character. Works such as Daidōji Shinsuke no hansei(The Early Life of
Le edizioni Via del Vento hanno selezionato per questa antologia cinque piccoli gioielli inediti di quello che viene considerato il maestro giapponese del racconto breve. Se i primi due racconti (Bisei no shin e Onna), che fanno parte della produzione giovanile dell'autore, mi hanno letteralmente incantata – il primo con un lirismo struggente e poetico, il secondo con descrizioni da assaporare parola per parola, immagine per immagine sulla maestosità, sulla generosità e sulla crudeltà della natura – gli altri tre (Shigo, Taneko no yuutsu e Yume), pur con il loro carattere più intimistico, lo stile apparentemente meno curato, la dimensione onirica, frammentata, a tratti quasi incompiuta, il senso di disagio, di inquietudine che trasmettono, non sono meno preziosi e potenti. In particolare Shigo mi è parso di una sincerità e trasparenza disarmanti: ricco di simbolismi, utilizza il sogno come espediente narrativo per aprire una finestra sull'inconscio – che in realtà è oltremodo conscio – dell'artista, morto suicida solo due anni dopo.