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This is an enchanting essay on aesthetics by one of the greatest Japanese novelists. Tanizaki's eye ranges over architecture, jade, food, toilets, and combines an acute sense of the use of space in buildings, as well as perfect descriptions of lacquerware under candlelight and women in the darkness of the house of pleasure.
Offering a portrait of Japanese life in the first half of the twentieth century, this book reveals the saga Makioka family struggling to marry off one of their daughters.
Una historia valiente y arriesgada de la mano de uno de los autores más conocidos de las letras japonesas. En ella, el autor narra las guerras civiles que sacudieron Japón en la segunda mitad del siglo XVI desde el punto de vista de las mujeres: madres, esposas e hijas, en un poderoso ejercicio narrativo que les otorga voz a aquellas que quedaron silenciadas por la Historia.Este audiolibro está narrado en castellano.Tanizaki Junichiro es un autor nacido en Tokio en 1886 y fallecido en 1965. Eterno candidato al premio Nobel, se le considera uno de los autores imprescindibles de la literatura japonesa contemporánea. Durante sus estudios absorbió toda la literatura occidental que cayó en sus manos, punto que influenció poderosamente toda su carrera. Jamás dejó de escribir, hasta el día de su muerte.
Una historia de amor tan perversa como hipnótica, una reflexión sobre el desgaste del tiempo y sobre los esfuerzos humanos por detenerlo. Shunkin, admirada aunque despótica música ciega, mantiene una relación amorosa aunque despótica con Sasuke, su discípulo entregado. La desgracia que los golpea a ambos de forma brutal pondrá a prueba los cimientos de su amor.Tanizaki Junichiro es un autor nacido en Tokio en 1886 y fallecido en 1965. Eterno candidato al premio Nobel, se le considera uno de los autores imprescindibles de la literatura japonesa contemporánea. Durante sus estudios absorbió toda la literatura occidental que cayó en sus manos, punto que influenció poderosamente toda su carrera. Jamás dejó de escribir, hasta el día de su muerte.
Una trabajadísima obra que mezcla el suspense y el erotismo en una historia de amor y extorsión a cuatro bandas. Por un lado, Kakuichi, esposa del joven abogado Kotaro, un ama de casa insatisfecha que se apunta a un curso de pintura tradicional para matar el aburrimiento. Por otro, Mitsuko, una estudiante seductora que pronto iniciará un tórrido romance con Kakuichi. Y en el extremo opuesto, Watanuki, novio de Mitsuko y dispuesto a llegar a límites insospechados para casarse con ella.Tanizaki Junichiro es un autor nacido en Tokio en 1886 y fallecido en 1965. Eterno candidato al premio Nobel, se le considera uno de los autores imprescindibles de la literatura japonesa contemporánea. Durante sus estudios absorbió toda la literatura occidental que cayó en sus manos, punto que influenció poderosamente toda su carrera. Jamás dejó de escribir, hasta el día de su muerte.
Un ensayo breve y al mismo tiempo revelador sobre el pensamiento estético en el arte japonés. En él, Tanizaki Junichiro reflexiona sobre el amor por el detalle, el minimalismo, la disciplina y la sutileza que encarna el arte japonés en oposición a la contundencia de lo occidental. Un texto imprescindible para quien quiera empezar a comprender los preceptos del arte nipón.Este audiolibro está narrado en castellano.Tanizaki Junichiro es un autor nacido en Tokio en 1886 y fallecido en 1965. Eterno candidato al premio Nobel, se le considera uno de los autores imprescindibles de la literatura japonesa contemporánea. Durante sus estudios absorbió toda la literatura occidental que cayó en sus manos, punto que influenció poderosamente toda su carrera. Jamás dejó de escribir, hasta el día de su muerte.
One morning, Takahashi, a writer who has just stayed up all night working, is interrupted by a phone call from his old friend Sonomura: barely able to contain his excitement, Sonomura claims that he has cracked a secret cryptographic code based on Edgar Allan Poe's The Gold-Bug and now knows exactly when and where a murder will take place-and they must hurry if they want to witness the murder, because it's later that very night! Sonomura has a history of lunacy and playing the amateur detective, so Takahashi is of course reluctant to believe him. Nevertheless, they stake out the secret location, and through tiny peepholes in the knotted wood, become voyeurs at the scene of a shocking crime... Atmospheric, erotic, and tense, Devils in Daylight is an early work by the master storyteller who "created a lifelong series of ingenious variations on a dominant theme: the power of love to energize and destroy" (Chicago Tribune).
With a precision and brilliance unmatched perhaps by any other novelist of the twentieth century, Junichiro Tanizaki interweaves a sense of his country''s deep past with the kind of pathologies and obsessions we are likely to think of as modern. Here, in two eerie and beautiful novellas, he displays this skill at its most elegant and affecting. The Reed Cutter has a contemporary setting, though it might have taken place any time in the past thousand years. On a fine September evening, the narrator decides to make a solitary excursion to the site of an ancient imperial palace south of Kyoto, a place now lost and overgrown near the banks of a river. Musing upon old poems, passages of history, and topographical antiquities, he eventually finds himself among the reeds of a sandbar sipping sake from the bottle he has brought with him, watching the moon rise over the river, and scribbling bits of verse in his notebook. Suddenly he is surprised to discover that he is not alone. A strange man joins him and begins to tell a most extraordinary tale about his father, about a scene glimpsed in a moonlit garden forty years before, and about a mysterious woman who has become a lasting obsession. Captain Shgemoto''s Mother is more violent but no less strange. It takes place in tenth-century Kyoto, in a world in which poetry and brutality, power and sexual impulse, shape the lives of the courtiers. Beginning in an almost whimsical vein with an account of the amorous exploits of a Heian Don Juan called Heiju, it gradually shifts mood to focus on three people—Shihei, the powerful Minister of the Left; his doddering uncle Kunitsune; and Kunitsune''s ravishing and much-younger wife, a woman known only as Shigemoto''s mother. How Shihei succeeds in taking Kunitsunes'' wife away from him in the course of a bizarre and drunken party is a story as shocking—and memorable—as anything Tanizaki ever wrote.
Junichiro Tanizaki's Naomi is both a hilarious story of one man's obsession and a brilliant reckoning of a nation's cultural confusion. When twenty-eight-year-old Joji first lays eyes upon the teenage waitress Naomi, he is instantly smitten by her exotic, almost Western appearance. Determined to transform her into the perfect wife and to whisk her away from the seamy underbelly of post-World War I Tokyo, Joji adopts and ultimately marries Naomi, paying for English and music lessons that promise to mold her into his ideal companion. But as she grows older, Joji discovers that Naomi is far from the naïve girl of his fantasies. And, in Tanizaki's masterpiece of lurid obsession, passion quickly descends into comically helpless masochism.
While recovering from a stroke, seventy-seven-year-old Utsugi turns to his diary to wryly record his struggle with his ageing body and his growing desire for his beautiful daughter-in-law Satsuko, a chic, Westernised dancer with a shady past.
Tanizaki's masterpiece is the story of four sisters, and the declining fortunes of a traditional Japanese family. It is a loving and nostalgic recreation of the sumptuous, intricate upper-class life of Osaka immediately before World War Two. With surgical precision, Tanizaki lays bare the sinews of pride, and brings a vanished era to vibrant life.
A seductive psychological thriller about obsession, jealousy and deceit, and a Japanese classic Sonoko Kakiuchi is a cultured Osaka lady in an uninspiring marriage. They begin a passionate affair and Sonoko soon finds herself infatuated by Mitsuko, and ensnared in a web of sex, humiliation and deceit.
This is the diary of a middle-aged man who is deeply in love with his younger wife, Ikuko. In spite of that love, the pair have grown physically apart, each unsure of the other's desires...until the day Ikuko discovers her husband's diary with its desperate hints of jealousy and voyeurism. Ikuko realises she has found the key to his very soul.
The marriage of Kaname and Misako is disintegrating: whilst seeking passion and fulfilment in the arms of others, they contemplate the humiliation of divorce.
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