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Otogizoshi: The Fairy Tale Book of Dazai Osamu (in English)
Osamu Dazai
Synopsis "Otogizoshi: The Fairy Tale Book of Dazai Osamu (in English)"
Dazai Osamu wrote The Fairy Tale Book (Otogizoshi) in the last months of the Pacific War. The traditional tales upon which Dazai's retellings are based are well known to every Japanese schoolchild, but this is no children's book. In Dazai's hands such stock characters as the kindhearted Oji-san to Oba-san ("Grandmother and Grandfather"), the mischievous tanuki badger, the fearsome Oni ogres, the greedy old man, the "tongue-cut" sparrow, and of course Urashima Taro (the Japanese Rip van Winkle) become complex individuals facing difficult and nuanced moral dilemmas. The resulting stories are thought-provoking, slyly subversive, and often hilarious.
In spite of the "gloom and doom" atmosphere always cited in reviews of The Setting Sun and the later No Longer Human, though, Dazai's cutting wit and rich humor are evident in the entire body of his work. His literature depicts the human condition in painfully blunt and realistic terms, but, like life itself, is often accompanied by a smile.
(Pseudónimo de Tsushima Shuji; Kanagi, 1909 - Tokio, 1948) Escritor japonés. Fruto del desencanto reinante en su país tras el fin de la Segunda Guerra Mundial, las últimas novelas de Osamu Dazai expresaron el sentir de una generación que había asistido al derrumbamiento de sus valores tradicionales: El sol poniente (1947), quizá su obra más famosa, se centra en la decadencia de la nobleza japonesa tras la derrota en la contienda, mientras que su último libro, Ya no humano (1948), narra en tono autobiográfico la frustración ante el descalabro nacional. Conocido por su ingenio irónico y sombrío y por la brillante fantasía de sus novelas y cuentos, su obsesión por el suicidio y su permanente búsqueda de una verdad ulterior lo convertirían en una figura de culto entre los lectores jóvenes de su país.