000 01607mam a22001694a 4500
008 990107s1999 caua b 000 0 eng
020 _a97819333330433 (paper)
100 1 _aNakagami, Kenji.
_95771
245 1 4 _aThe cape and other stories from the Japanese ghetto /
_cKenji Nakagami ; translated, with a preface and afterword, by Eve Zimmerman.
260 _aBerkeley, Calif. :
_bStone Bridge Press,
_cc1976.
300 _a186 p. :
_bill. ;
520 _aAnguished, lusty, tragic, brutal...are the stories and setting of this collection from one of Japan's great postwar literary masters. Kenji Nakagami was born a burakumin. Isolated in the same rural and urban ghettoes for centuries, the burakumin are Japan's little-known outcaste class who still suffer subtle and not-so-subtle acts of discrimination and abuse.
520 8 _aNakagami's breakthrough work, The Cape portrays a tough burakumin family, scarred by violence, held together by courage and love, yet threatened by madness and one man's tormented musings on the father he barely knew. In House on Fire, the phenomenon of generational violence plays out in the character study of an ordinary man trapped by his memories and an unfathomable rage. Red Hair is an extended erotic dream, an accidental carnal interlude between a working-class man and a mysterious woman who escape together into the comfort and torture of pure physicality.
520 8 _aDriven by full-bodied characters and muscular prose, Nakagami's stories unveil the disturbing landscapes and alleyways he knew all too well.
942 _cBK
050 0 0 _aPL857.A3683
_bA28 1999
999 _c29288
_d29288