Sunday, March 17, 2019
Personal Freedom and Nonconformity in Kobo Abes Novels :: Kobo Abe Literature Society Freedom Essays
Personal Freedom and Nonconformity in Kobo Abes NovelsNo macrocosm or woman is coquetteed by theory alone. (WITD 32)In declaiming the ability to woo by theory, Kobo Abe betrays his desire to do exactly that. Trained as a physician, Abe has a mindset which leans toward the scientific method one of hypothesis, experiment, result, and conclusion. In this case, the first hypothesis posed that a man could woo by theory alone, the experiment was the attempt of a suit guided by abstractive principles, the result a failure, and the conclusion drawn is that such a wooing is not possible, disproving the original hypothesis. We see in this procedure not however Abes predilection for theory and introspection, only when we also are provided a glimpse at the motivations of a man who would initially believe in a theory of wooing, a concept which to many might attend an obvious contradiction. His novels, indeed, is rife with the contradictions that have been Abes trademark, and it is in his attempt to immix these various contradictions to prove a common theme of personal liberty and nonconformity that the novels gain the greater part of its power.In The Woman in the Dunes, Abe describes the nature of reality the individual reality, wherein it ultimately springs forth from the unconscious mind, and the kindly reality, where the individual reality, at least in terms of its manifestation, git be either suppressed or encouraged by the type of fraternity in which the individual lives and works. It is a complex attempt to unify these devil realities, and to reach a sort of accord whereby the individual self can find expression and participate in a meaningful mien in the social reality. In other words, he is attempting to bridge that chasm, the go that separates the constricting perception of day-to-day social reality from the larger and distant less stable absolute reality, of which the day-to-day social reality is precisely one small part.Abe deals with these the mes through the image of the sand. The sand is formless, and yet it becomes a barrier blocking the protagonists attempts at escape. It sucks moisture from his body, but also traps it, causes wood to rot, and, in the final pages of the story, becomes a massive water supply pump. Abe uses sand imagery as a means to convey both the absurdity of the social day-to-day reality as well as a means by which an almost Zen-like meditative state is bring forth in the protagonist, through which he may achieve a high level of consciousness.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment