Underground
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- 15,99 €
Publisher Description
Inspiré de l'attentat perpétré par la secte Aum en 1995, une réflexion sur le fanatisme et le terrorisme, qui offre une troublante parenté avec les thèmes à l'œuvre dans1Q84et des clefs inédites pour déchiffrer les mystères de l'univers murakamien.
Livre d'entretiens, mais aussi réflexion philosophique et autobiographique, un essai indispensable pour décrypter l'œuvre de l'auteur de 1Q84, la trilogie au succès planétaire.
Le 20 mars 1995 se produisait l'attentat le plus meurtrier jamais perpétré au Japon : en pleine heure de pointe, des adeptes de la secte Aum répandent du gaz sarin dans le métro de Tokyo, tuant douze personnes, en blessant plus de cinq mille.
Très choqué, mais aussi révolté par le traitement médiatique par trop manichéen de la tragédie, Murakami va partir à la rencontre des victimes et de leurs bourreaux : rescapés du drame et adeptes de la secte.
Au fil des entretiens apparaissent tous les grands thèmes chers à Murakami : l'étrangeté au monde, l'impossible quête d'absolu, le mal venu des profondeurs, ces little people présents en chacun de nous, incarnations des forces destructrices qui nous font basculer parfois vers l'irréparable...
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
On March 20, 1995, followers of the religious cult Aum Shinrikyo unleashed lethal sarin gas into cars of the Tokyo subway system. Many died, many more were injured. This is acclaimed Japanese novelist Murakami's (The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle, etc.) nonfiction account of this episode. It is riveting. What he mostly does here, however, is listen to and record, in separate sections, the words of both victims, people who "just happened to be gassed on the way to work," and attackers. The victims are ordinary people bankers, businessmen, office workers, subway workers who reflect upon what happened to them, how they reacted at the time and how they have lived since. Some continue to suffer great physical disabilities, nearly all still suffer great psychic trauma. There is a Rashomon-like quality to some of the tales, as victims recount the same episodes in slightly different variations. Cumulatively, their tales fascinate, as small details weave together to create a complex narrative. The attackers are of less interest, for what they say is often similar, and most remain, or at least do not regret having been, members of Aum. As with the work of Studs Terkel, which Murakami acknowledges is a model for this present work, the author's voice, outside of a few prefatory comments, is seldom heard. He offers no grand explanation, no existential answer to what happened, and the book is better for it. This is, then, a compelling tale of how capriciously and easily tragedy can destroy the ordinary, and how we try to make sense of it all.