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Patriotism by Yukio Mishima — book cover

Patriotism

by Yukio Mishima, Geoffrey W. Sargent
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Overview

One of the most powerful short stories ever written: Yukio Mishima’s masterpiece about the erotics of patriotism and honor, love and suicide.

By now, Yukio Mishima’s (1925-1970) dramatic demise through an act of seppuku after an inflammatory public speech has become the stuff of literary legend. With Patriotism, Mishima was able to give his heartwrenching patriotic idealism an immortal vessel. A lieutenant in the Japanese army comes home to his wife and informs her that his closest friends have become mutineers. He and his beautiful loyal wife decide to end their lives together. In unwavering detail Mishima describes Shinji and Reiko making love for the last time and the couple’s seppuku that follows.

Synopsis

One of the most powerful short stories ever written: Yukio Mishima’s masterpiece about the erotics of patriotism and honor, love and suicide.

Library Journal

This brief historical story of a young army officer and his wife is considered seminal Mishima. LJ's reviewer wrote that Mishima's stories have "timeless and universal appeal" (LJ 4/1/66).

About the Author, Yukio Mishima

Yukio Mishima (1925-1970) was many people. The best known in Japan of the writers to emerge there after World War II, he was by far the most published abroad. Mishima completed his first novel the year he entered the University of Tokyo. More followed (some twenty-three, the last completed the day of his death in November, 1970), along with more than forty play, over ninety short stories, several poetry and travel volumes and hundreds of essays. Influenced by European literature, in which he was exceptionally well read, he was an interpreter to his own people of Japan's ancient virtues, to which he urged a return. He had sung on the stage, starred in and directed movies and was a noted practitioner of Japan's traditional martial arts. He seemed at the height of his career and vitality at the age of forty-five, when after a demonstration in the public interest he committed suicide by ceremonial seppuku.

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Editorials

The Mookse and the Gripes

A direct yet lyrical style devoted entirely to bringing out the elevated emotions of its two characters.— Trevor Berrett

The New York Times Book Review

The violence we are facing with such difficulty in our daily lives, he gives us simply in all its subcutaneous horror and myth.— Hortense Calisher

Library Journal

This brief historical story of a young army officer and his wife is considered seminal Mishima. LJ's reviewer wrote that Mishima's stories have "timeless and universal appeal" (LJ 4/1/66).

Library Journal

The life of postwar Japanese novelist Yukio Mishima is stunningly dramatized here by Paul Schrader (American Gigolo). With a driving score by Philip Glass, this unconventional biopic is framed by Mishima's tragic final act while flashing back to his youthful self-transformation and interspersing boldly stylized re-creations of his works. Mishima's sole filmmaking venture, the prescient dramatic short Patriotism, offers an intriguing complement for larger collections.


—Jeff T. Dick

Donald Keene

Remarkably beautiful, Mishima's style exploits every resource in the Japanese language, giving new life to unbroken literary tradition of a thousand years. He is unquestionably a modern writer, speaking to modern audiences...of a Japanese way of life that is completely intelligible, but completely remote. -- The Saturday Review

Book Details

Published
February 1, 2010
Publisher
New Directions Publishing Corporation
Pages
60
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780811218542

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