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The Cape and Other Stories from the Japanese Ghetto book cover
The Cape and Other Stories from the Japanese Ghetto
1999
First Published
3.67
Average Rating
200
Number of Pages
The fiction of Kenji Nakagami has no peer in contemporary Japan. Born into the burakumin—an outcast class shunned in feudal Japan and still suffering discrimination today—Nakagami depicts the lives of his people in powerful, sensual prose and stark, sometimes horrifying detail. The Cape is his breakthrough novella about a burakumin community in a small coastal city and their struggles with complicated family histories and troubled memories. Poverty, violence, suicide, and the harsh natural conditions of their home constantly disrupt their lives. Two more early stories, "The Burning House" and "Redhead, " continue these themes, relieved by small moments of profound tenderness.
Avg Rating
3.67
Number of Ratings
319
5 STARS
23%
4 STARS
34%
3 STARS
33%
2 STARS
7%
1 STARS
3%
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Author

Kenji Nakagami
Kenji Nakagami
Author · 3 books

See 中上 健次. Kenji Nakagami (中上健次 Nakagami Kenji, August 2, 1946 – August 12, 1992) was a Japanese novelist and essayist. He is well known as the first, and so far the only, post-war Japanese writer to identify himself publicly as a Burakumin, a member of one of Japan’s long-suffering outcaste groups. His works depict the intense life-experiences of men and women struggling to survive in a Burakumin community in western Japan. His most celebrated novels include “Misaki” (The Cape), which won the Akutagawa Prize in 1976, and “Karekinada” (The Sea of Withered Trees), which won both the Mainichi and Geijutsu Literary Prizes in 1977. During the 1980s Nakagami was an active and controversial figure in the Japanese literary world, and his work was the subject of much debate among scholars and literary critics. As one reviewer put it, "Nakagami was the first writer from the ghetto to make it into the mainstream and to attempt to tell other Japanese, however fictively or even fantastically, about life at the rough end of the economic miracle." Nakagami was at the height of his fame when he died, of kidney cancer, at the age of 46. (from Wikipedia)

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