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Takeo Arishima

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Arishima Takeo (有島 武郎) (4 March 18789 June,1923) was a novelist, short-story writer and essayist during the late Meiji and Taisho periods. His two younger brothers, Arishima Ikuma (有島生馬) and Satomi Ton (里美弴) were also authors.

Early life

Arishima was born in Tokyo into a wealthy family as the son of an ex-samurai official in the Ministry of Finance. He was first sent to a mission school in Yokohama, where he was taught English, after which he entered preparatory school of the prestigious Gakushuin peer's school, when he was 10 years old.

After he graduated from the Gakushuin at age 19, he entered the Sapporo Agricultural College (the present-day Faculty of Agriculture at Hokkaido University). During his studies at the university, he attempted suicide with Morimoto Kokichi (森本厚吉), who later went on to establish several women's schools in Japan. The suicide failed, and Arishima subsequently became influenced by Uchimura Kanzō and became a Christian in 1901.

After graduation and a mandatory short stint in the Imperial Japanese Army, Arishima took English lessons from Mary Elkinton Nitobe, Inazo Nitobe's wife, and in July 1903, he obtained a position as a foreign correspondent in the United States for the Mainichi shimbun. In the United States he enrolled at Haverford College (a Quaker institution outside of Philadelphia) and later Harvard University. After graduation, he briefly worked in an insane asylum operated by the Quaker sect. He recorded his experiences from his journey to America in his diary.

During his time in America, he became critical towards Christianity, attracted to socialism, and influenced by the works of writers such as Walt Whitman, Henrik Ibsen, and Peter Kropotkin. His time and experiences in America and subsequent year in Europe also profoundly influenced his writing style and his outlook on the world, resulting in feelings of alienation from Japanese society.

After he returned to Japan in 1907, he reentered the army briefly before becoming an English and ethics teacher in 1909 at his alma mater.

Literary career

Through his brother Arishima Ikuma, he also became acquainted with authors who graduated from the Gakushuin, including Shiga Naoya and Mushanokoji Saneatsu. Arishima and these writers formed a group, which was named after their literary magazine Shirakaba (白樺, White Birch), which was first published in 1911. He wrote novels and criticisms and was known as one of the central figures in the Shirakaba group.

In 1909, Arishima published his best-known work: A Certain Woman (或る女, Aru Onna), a moral and psychological melodrama about a strong-willed woman struggling against a hypocritical male-dominated society. In this work, and in subsequent novels, such as The Descendents of Cain (カインの末裔, Kain no Matsuei) (1917) he depicts God’s curse on both man and nature through the eyes of a self-destructive tenant farmer. While critically acclaimed for his style, the themes and characters of Arishima’s works did not appeal to many contemporary Japanese readers.

Later life

In 1922, Arishima implemented the socialist philosophy he had been developing by renunciation of the ownership of a large tenant farm in Hokkaido, which he had inherited from his father, publicly stating that he wanted to distance himself from the petit bourgeois in the coming revolution.

Arishima married in 1910, but his wife died in 1916 of tuberculosis leaving him three children. In 1922, Arishima met Hatano Akiko, a married woman and an editor working for the Fujin Koron, a famous women's magazine. Their relationship quickly developed into an extramarital affair, which came to be known by Hatano's husband. This lead to Arishima and Hatano committing suicide in Karuizawa by hanging themselves.

Legacy

After his death, Arishima became known for his detailed diaries, covering more than twenty volumes, with an intimate record of his life, fears and hopes. His contemporaries regarded Arishima as a philosopher and social critic as much as a novelist. His writing was critical of Christianity and strongly influenced by socialism; emotionally intense, humanistic, and employed ideas from the Bible, Tolstoy, and anarchic socialism . Arishima's major works include:

  • Aru Onna (A Certain Woman) 1919
  • Oshiminaku Ai wa Ubau (Love Robs without Hesitation)
  • Kain no Matsuei (Descendant of Cain) 1917

Available in English

  • A certain woman. ISBS (1978). ASIN: B0006E0Y5Q
  • Labyrinth. Madison Books (2000). ISBN 0819182931
  • The agony of coming into the world. Hokuseido Press (1955). ASIN: B0006AV8GE

References

  • Anderer, Paul. Other Worlds: Arishima Takeo and the Bounds of Modern Japanese Fiction. Columbia University Press (1985). ISBN 0231058845
  • Morton, Leith. Divided Self: A Biography of Arishima Takeo. Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center (1989). ISBN 0043780067