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1901 2012
Prize category:
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The Nobel Prize in Literature 1994
Kenzaburo Oe
Kenzaburo Oe
Born: 31 January 1935, Uchiko, Japan
Residence at the time of the award: Japan
Prize motivation: "who with poetic force creates an imagined world, where life and myth condense to form a disconcerting picture of the human predicament today"
Language: Japanese

Biography
Kenzaburo Oe was born in 1935, in a
village hemmed in by the forests of Shikoku, one of the four main
islands of Japan. His family had lived in the village tradition
for several hundred years, and no one in the Oe clan had ever
left the village in the valley. Even after Japan embarked on
modernization soon after the Meiji Restoration, and it became
customary for young people in the provinces to leave their native
place for Tokyo or the other large cities, the Oes remained in
Ose-mura. Maps no longer show the small hamlet by name because it
was annexed by a neighbouring town. The women of the Oe clan had
long assumed the role of storytellers and had related the
historical events of the region, including the two uprisings that
occurred there before and after the Meiji Restoration. They also
told of events closer in nature to legend than to history. These
stories, of a unique cosmology and of the human condition
therein, which Oe heard told since his infancy, left him with an
indelible mark.
The Second World War broke out when Oe was six. Militaristic
education extended to every nook and cranny of the country, the
Emperor as both monarch and deity reigning over its politics and
its culture. Young Oe, therefore, experienced the nation's myth
and history as well as those of the village tradition, and these
dual experiences were often in conflict. Oe's grandmother was a
critical storyteller who defended the culture of the village,
narrating to him humourously, but ever defiantly, anti-national
stories. After his father's death during the war, his mother took
over his father's role as educator. The books she bought him -
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and The Strange
Adventures of Nils Holgersson - have left him with an
impression he says 'he will carry to the grave'.
Japan's defeat in the war in 1945 brought enormous change, even
to the remote forest village. In schools, children were taught
democratic principles, replacing those of the absolutist Emperor
system, and this education was all the more thorough, for the
nation was then under the administration of American and other
forces. Young Oe took democracy straight to his heart. So strong
was his desire for democracy that he decided to leave for Tokyo;
leave the village of his forefathers, the life they had lived and
preserved, out of sheer belief that the city offered him an
opportunity to knock on the door of democracy, the door that
would lead him to a future of freedom on paths that stretched out
to the world. Had it not been for the drastic change the nation
underwent at this time, Oe, whose love of trees is one of his
innate qualities, would have remained in his village as his
forefathers had done, and tended to the forest as one of its
guardians.
At the age of eighteen, Oe made his first long train trip to
Tokyo, and in the following year enrolled in the Department of
French Literature at Tokyo University where he received
instruction under the tutelage of Professor Kazuo Watanabe, a
specialist on Francois Rabelais. Rabelais' image system of
grotesque realism, to use Mikhail Bakhtin's terminology, provided
him with a methodology to positively and thoroughly reassess the
myths and history of his native village in the valley.
Watanabe's thoughts on humanism, which he arrived at from his
study of the French Renaissance, helped shape Oe's fundamental
view of society and the human condition. An avid reader of
contemporary French and American literature, Oe viewed the social
condition of the metropolis in light of the works he read. Yet,
he also endeavored to reorganize, under the light of Rabelais and
humanism, his thoughts on what the women of the village had
handed down to him, those stories that constituted his
background. In this sense, he was again living another
duality.
Oe started writing in 1957, while still a French literature
student at the university. His works from 1957 through 1958 -
from the short story, The Catch, which won him the
Akutagawa Award, to his first novel, Bud-Nipping, Lamb
Shooting* (1958) - depict the tragedy of war tearing asunder
the idyllic life of a rural youth. In Lavish are the Dead
(1957), a short story, and in The Youth Who Came Late*
(1961), a novel, Oe portrayed student life in Tokyo, a city where
the dark shadows of the U.S. occupation still remained. Apparent
in these works are strong influences of Jean-Paul Sartre and
other modern French writers.
Crisis struck Oe's life and literature with the birth of his
first son, Hikari. Hikari was born with a cranial deformity
resulting in his becoming a mentally- handicapped person.
Traumatic as the experience was for Oe, the crisis granted him a
new lease on both his life and his literature. Overcoming the
agony and determined to coexist with the child, Oe wrote A
Personal Matter (1964), his penning of his pain in accepting
the brain-damaged child into his life, and of how he arrived at
his resolve to live with him. Through the catalytic medium of
humanism, he conjoined his own fate of having to accept a
handicapped child into the family with that of the stance one
ought to take in contemporary society, and wrote Hiroshima
Notes (1965), a long essay which describes the realities and
thoughts of the A-bomb victims.
Following this, Oe deepened his interest in Okinawa, the
southernmost group of islands in Japan. Before the Meiji
Restoration, Okinawa was an independent country with its own
culture. During World War II, the islands became the site of the
only battle Japan fought on its own soil. After the war, the
people of Okinawa were left to suffer a long U.S. military
occupation. Oe's interest in Okinawa was oriented, politically,
toward the lives of the Okinawans living on what became a U.S.
military base, and, culturally, to what Okinawa meant to him in
terms of its traditions. The latter opened out to a broadened
interest in the culture of South Koreans, enabling him to further
appreciate the importance of Japan's peripheral cultures, which
differed from Tokyo-centered culture. This pursuit provided
realistic substance to his study of Mikhail Bakhtin's theory
regarding a people's culture which led him to write The Silent
Cry (1967), a work that ties in the myths and history of the
forest village with the contemporary age.
After The Silent Cry, two streams of thought, which at
times flow as one, are apparent and consistent in Oe's literary
world. Starting with A Personal Matter is one group of
works that depicts his life of coexistence with his
mentally-handicapped son, Hikari. Teach Us to Outgrow our
Madness (1969), a two-volume work, painfully portrays both
the agony-laden trials and errors he experiences in his life with
his yet unspeaking infant child, and his pursuit of his father he
lost during the war. My Deluged Soul* (1973) depicts a
father who relates to his infant child who, through the medium of
the songs of the wild birds, has started to communicate with the
family, and who empathizes with youths that belong to a
belligerent and radical political party. Rouse Up, O, Young
Men of the New Age!* (1983), a work in which Oe draws upon
images from William Blake's Prophecies, depicts his son Hikari's
development from a child to a young man, and thus crowns the
works he wrote about his handicapped child.
The second group are stories in which Oe relates characters who
he establishes in the theater of the myths and history of his
native forest village, but who interact closely with life in
today's cities. This world of Oe's fiction, starting with Bud-
Nipping, Lamb-Shooting and followed by The Silent Cry,
came to shape the core of his entire literature. Making full use
of new ideas of cultural anthropology, these works represent the
totality of Oe's world of fiction, as evidenced in Letters to
My Sweet Bygone Years (1987), a work about a young man who,
banking on his cosmology and world-view of Dante, strives but
fails to establish a politico- cultural base in the forest.
Contemporary Games is a story that alternates between myth
and history, which Oe supports with the matriarch and trickster
principles he draws from cultural anthropology. He rewrote this
work in narrative form as M/T and the Wonders of the
Forest* (1986). With the aid of W.B. Yeat's poetic metaphors, Oe
embarked on writing The Flaming Green Tree*, a trilogy
comprised of Until the 'Savior' Gets Socked* (1993),
Vacillating* (1994), and On The Great Day* (1995).
Oe has announced that with the completion of this trilogy, he
will enter into his life's final stage of study, in which he will
attempt a new form of literature. The implication of this project
is that Oe deems his effort at presenting his cosmology, history
and folk legend as having been brought to full circle, and that
he has succeeded in creating, through his portrayal of that place
in the valley and its people, a model for this contemporary age.
It also implies that he considers Hikari's becoming a composer,
in actuality, surpasses the importance of his own literature
about him.
Oe's winning the Nobel Prize for 1994 has thus encouraged him to
embark on his pursuit of a new form of literature and a new life
for himself.
*Tentative English titles.
From Les Prix Nobel. The Nobel Prizes 1994, Editor Tore Frängsmyr, [Nobel Foundation], Stockholm, 1995
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1994
MLA style: "Kenzaburo Oe - Biography". Nobelprize.org. 21 May 2013 http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/literature/laureates/1994/oe.html
