Outlandish Lit

Review: Shutting Out the Sun by Michael Zielenziger

Friday, March 7, 2014

Shutting Out the Sun by Michael Zielenziger
Publisher: Vintage. September 2007
Pages: 352
Genre: Non-fiction
Source: Barnes & Noble
First Line: To outsiders, Japan often appears as a murky, mysterious, and insular society that, over its many centuries, has proven exceptionally difficult to pierce.


ADD TO GOODREADS

BUY FROM INDIEBOUND

BUY FROM BOOK DEPOSITORY



I don't read a lot of non-fiction. The only non-fiction I normally read is collections of personal essays, so this was a little bit of a struggle for me. But Japan and the hikikomori is a subject that has fascinated me for years.

Hikikomori are a group of Japanese young adults, generally male, who shut themselves out of society entirely. They choose to live in their rooms with little to no contact with anybody outside. This is a result of a rigid society and often intense bullying within the schooling system. Something that appears in Japan which is interesting: "Sekentei -- how one appears in the eyes of society, or the need to keep up appearances -- can powerfully constrain individual actions just as bullying does in the collectivist pressure cooker of contemporary Japan." So obviously it's fascinating to look at how a society is structured can influence people within it in extreme ways. I just don't know if this book is what I wanted to read.

I wanted to hear more from the hikikomori themselves and focus on their stories. Maybe I just wanted to read a piece of fiction about hikikomori, but I didn't get that. This book was mainly focused on the economy and sort of politics. This was all well and good at first, but it felt like Zielenziger was often repeating points he had already made. I kept just wanting it to end, which isn't a good sign.

Zielenziger took a few chapters to focus on some other interesting things that are sort of related. There are women in Japan who refuse to marry and have children, instead living at home and focusing on their careers. There was also the mention of extreme materialism, the birth control taboo, and the depression taboo. But then, by the end, the book strays even further than I had expected it to. It started talking about the effects of Christianity on Western society and how the lack of it influences Japan's society and lack of individualism. It was certainly interesting, but I'd like to see more research about it. And I'd like to see it in a book that isn't this one. He also brought up developing South Korea and did a lot of comparisons between the two countries. Again, interesting, but not exactly what I was interested in reading about.

Shutting Out the Sun was spot on about a lot of the things in Japanese society that would lead people to try to cut themselves off from society. While it's a fascinating topic, if the book had been less repetitive and stayed on track a bit more, I would have liked it a lot more than I did.


Some Quotes:

"'When they try to adapt themselves [to survive] in economic society, they have to destroy their insides. And in Japan, once you drop out, you can't drop back in.'"

"Mostly, modern Japanese have been forced to live, at best, as furtive individualists who mask themselves in outlandish clothes or dye their hair pink during a school vacation, but rush to the hairdresser before returning to work or the classroom in the same blue uniform and dark hair as their peers."

"Nisbett suggests that while Japanese literally see more of the world-they report more about a background context than their American counterparts do-they find it more difficult to detach an individual object from its surroundings"

"'In Japan, unless you have a real sense of being enmeshed with others, dependent on others, then you cannot feel secure. We're still a country where it's difficult for each person to live for himself.'"


Outlandishness Rating: 5/10

Hikikomori are an odd group of people that are hard not to be sympathetic with. I wish I had heard more of their experiences, though. I also found it odd that otaku were only mentioned briefly (like maybe a few sentences). Japan is an interesting place.

Review: The Sense of an Ending by Julian Barnes

Saturday, April 20, 2013


The Sense of an Ending by Julian Barnes
Publisher: Vintage Books, May 2012
Pages: 163
Genre: Literary fiction
First Line: I remember, in no particular order:


ADD TO GOODREADS

BUY FROM INDIEBOUND

BUY FROM BOOK DEPOSITORY






I almost didn't pick up this book. I had seen it on a list of good books or something, but all I really knew about it was that it won a Man Booker Prize (which my mother is obsessed with) and that it was about a divorced man. That last part made me dismiss it. But I saw it in the library and I checked it out and I couldn't be more happy that I did.

The narrator, Tony, spends the first part of the book going over some stories of his youth and his group of pseudo-intellectual friends back in school. Talk of youth, of course, leads eventually to recounting his first times experiencing love and sex. The second part brings us back to the narrator in his 60's with a content life, now amicably divorced, discovering that he was left the diary of one of his now deceased friends from youth. This one object shakes up his entire life, bringing his past back to the present. (Another book about memory? Sign me up!)

The Sense of an Ending is short and incredibly poignant (like this review, minus the poignancy). Everything unfolds beautifully, and Tony's realizations are gentle and important. It felt almost like a Catcher in the Rye for adults. Don't ask me why I say that, though, because I haven't read Catcher in the Rye in years. I wish I better knew how to praise this book in review form, but, for one, I don't think I really know how to write reviews, and also this book is just so simply beautiful. It's a quick read that's easy to get absorbed into. I think it was important that I read this book, and that is all I know.

Some Quotes:

"It strikes me that this may be one of the differences between youth and age: when we are young, we invent different futures for ourselves; when we are old, we invent different pasts for others."

"How often do we tell our own life story? How often do we adjust, embellish, make sly cuts? And the longer life goes on, the fewer are those around to challenge our account, to remind us that our life is not our life, merely the story we have told about our life. Told to others, but--mainly--to ourselves."

Outlandishness Rating: 4/10

Very real, but the structure and ending get it some of those coveted outlandish points.

Recommended For:

Anybody alive. If you can't tell, I'm kind of into this book. But, again, if you have hang ups about memory, read this especially.

Share

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...