Marines of Yukio Mishima are sinking with the sea. Looking at the cultures of death all over the world existentialism, there are various convictions about human's ultimate and unavoidable outcome, death. In the United States and most Westernized cultures, there is a tendency to consider drugs, respiratory organs, etc. as being able to avoid death. For us, death is not a simple process. Usually, we do not accept it as a normal part of life. For the westernized people, death is not a celebration, it is something frightening.
Yukio Mishima from a crew collapsed in the sea is considered a special one for many literary worlds and many irreplaceable contributions. This book was translated by John Nathan and published in New York in 1994 by First Vintage International (page 181). The original version was published by Alfred A. Knopf in New York in 1965. This is used to judge the book. Usually, you choose how to read. This book was assigned to the course, but I still gave a cover once before reading. My first impression was that the cover focused on the title of the book by focusing on a huge rolling wave and depicting a sailor. After knowing that the big wave is a popular symbol of Japanese culture and reading this book, I handed over the cover again. Everything about the cover reflects how the Japanese culture is written from the waves to the title and the author's name. I think that it is a character in the cover.
In the context of the coast of Yokohama Port, Yukio Mishima will be held in "Battle in the seaman's sea" in Japan after the Second World War. Widow Fuso Kuroda, a fine of merchandise merchants in Europe, her provocative son climb, and Ryuji Tsukazaki, the second partner Rakuya cargo: At the beginning of this book we introduce the three main characters. Mr. Fujiso Kuroda owns a high-end clothing store imported from Europe and the UK in Yokohama. In her young son as a widow living a lonely life, climbing is a 13-year-old boy who lost her father five years ago. Ambition spends most of his free time on a group of juveniles of the times trying to understand the fundamental order of the universe through their objective philosophy.
For the living of seafarers who have fallen from opposition to the adult world, and all attendant sentiments: marine creatures such as Kuroda Mishima Yukio, etc. Through the diary's words and the actions of the gangs, gradually separated from society, fundamental beliefs were adopted. In this respect, it reflects Mishima's view of life and the view of Japanese culture in the middle of the 20th century. As a little boy, Oshima Mishima later shares functions with young characters