Reading Circle 15: ‚An Artist of the Floating World‘ by Kazuo Ishiguro (1986)

Podcast
Reading Circle
  • 2018_03_06_reading_circle
    59:00
audio
28:00 Min.
Reading Circle 78: 'The Heaven and Earth Grocery Store' by James McBride
audio
29:01 Min.
Reading Circle 80: 'Erasure' by Percival Everett
audio
29:00 Min.
Reading Circle 79: 'Victory City' by Salman Rushdie
audio
29:00 Min.
Reading Circle 77: 'Austria Behind the Mask' by Paul Lendvai
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Reading Circle 76: 'The Tortilla Curtain' by T.C. Boyle
audio
29:00 Min.
Reading Circle 75: 'Small Things Like These ' by Claire Keegan
audio
29:00 Min.
Reading Circle 74: 'Scenes From a Childhood' by Jon Fosse
audio
29:01 Min.
Reading Circle 73: 'Boyhood' by J.M.Coetzee
audio
28:55 Min.
Reading Circle 72: 'Assembly' by Natasha Brown
audio
29:00 Min.
Reading Circle 71: 'The Latecomer' by Jean Hanff Korelitz
Linda, Maria, Sonja, Sandra and Andrew discuss the novel.
World War 2 is over and Japan sets about rebuilding its shattered cities. Masujo Ono, an ageing painter, looks back over his life and assesses his career, which coincided with the rise of Japanese militarism.
We discuss the author (the current Nobel Prizewinner for Literature)and his background, how time is handled in the novel, the various meanings of the  ‚floating world‘, and generational relationships.
To what extent is the artist representative of much of Japanese society before and after WW2?
Has Ono’s life been wasted? Or was he fundamentally misguided?
Does he come to terms with his past, or does he repress any guilt he might have?
In how far is the novel a ‚Japanese‘ novel? Here we quote Ishiguro himself.
We also discuss whether the narrator is ‚unrealiable‘ and the fluid, ‚floating‘ style. Does the style and ambivalent tension reflect shifting values?

 

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