The Last Samurai Reread
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- ¥2,200
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- ¥2,200
発行者による作品情報
Considered by some to be the greatest novel of the twenty-first century, Helen DeWitt’s brilliant The Last Samurai tells the story of Sibylla, an Oxford-educated single mother raising a possible child prodigy, Ludo. Disappointed when he meets his biological father, the boy decides that he can do better. Inspired by Akira Kurosawa’s Seven Samurai, he embarks on a quixotic, moving quest to find a suitable father. The novel’s cult-classic status did not come easy: it underwent a notoriously tortuous publication process and briefly went out of print.
Lee Konstantinou combines a riveting reading of The Last Samurai with a behind-the-scenes look at DeWitt’s fraught experiences with corporate publishing. He shows how interpreting the ambition and richness of DeWitt’s work in light of her struggles with literary institutions provides a potent social critique. The novel helps us think about our capacity for learning and creativity, revealing the constraints that capitalism and material deprivation impose on intellectual flourishing. Drawing on interviews with DeWitt and other key figures, Konstantinou explores the book’s composition and its history with Talk Miramax Books, the publishing arm of Bob and Harvey Weinstein’s media empire. He argues that The Last Samurai allegorizes its troubled relationship with the institutions and middlemen that ferried it into the world. What’s ultimately at stake in Ludo’s quest is not only who might make a good father but also how we might fulfill our potential in a world that often seems cruelly designed to thwart that very possibility.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Curious how criticism "might be written differently if it were informed by oral history and sociology," Konstantinou (Pop Apocalypse), associate professor of English at the University of Maryland, delivers a rewarding "biography" of Helen DeWitt's 2000 novel The Last Samurai. Konstantinou's approach involves interviews with publishers, editors, and Dewitt herself, who provided Konstantinou with access to multiple versions of her manuscript. Konstantinou chronicles the copyediting of the novel, a contentious process that nearly led DeWitt to self-publish (she "wanted to use numerals instead of spelled-out numbers to mirror how her characters think in mathematical terms"), and the fallout that occurred when the publisher, Talk Miramax, was dissolved five years after publication: the book went out-of-print, only to be republished by New Directions in 2016. Konstantinou draws sharp conclusions about literature ("Moments of failure seem, almost tautologically, to exist outside literary history, but they are in fact the very substance that literary history is made of") from the story of The Last Samurai, and about DeWitt's relationship to art. Fans of the novel shouldn't miss this.