Excerpt from The Quarterly Notebook, Vol. 1: June, 1916
The ambiguities of certain early parts of the play seem mainly due to the fact that the Princess Rokujo, the con crete figure on the stage, is a phantom or image of Awoi-no Uye's own jealousy. That is to say, Awoi is tormented by her own passion, and this passion obsesses her first in the form of a personal apparition of Rokujo, then in demonic form.
This play was written centuries before Ibsen declared that life is a contest with the phantoms of the mind. The difficulties of the translator have lain in separating what belongs to Awoi herself from the things belonging to the ghost of Rokujo, very much as modern psychologists might have difficulty in detaching the personality or memories of an Obsessed person from the personal memories of the obsession. Baldly: an Obsessed person thinks he is Napoleon, an image of his own thought would be confused with scraps relating perhaps to St. Helena, Corsica, and Waterloo.
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ISBN | 9781334073977 |
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Sprache | eng |
Cover | Kartonierter Einband (Kt) |
Verlag | Forgotten Books |
Jahr | 2016 |
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