The Setting Sun
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- USD 0.99
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- USD 0.99
Descripción editorial
Published in 1947 and translated into English by the renowned scholar Donald Keene, The Setting Sun is Osamu Dazai's searing portrait of a once-noble Japanese family's disintegration in the chaos following World War II. The novel's Japanese title, "Shayo," gave rise to the term "shayozoku" (setting sun tribe)—a phrase that came to define the entire generation of declining aristocrats displaced by postwar social upheaval. Narrated primarily by Kazuko, a genteel young woman struggling to adapt to reduced circumstances, the story chronicles her family's fall from grace: their forced move from a Tokyo mansion to a rustic countryside cottage, the slow death of her elegant mother (the last true aristocrat), and the nihilistic self-destruction of her brother Naoji, a drug-addicted writer haunted by the war. Interspersed with Naoji's journal entries and letters, the narrative builds toward an inevitable tragedy while Kazuko desperately seeks meaning and purpose—ultimately through an unconventional act of rebellion against social norms. Dazai writes with brutal honesty about addiction, despair, class dissolution, and the impossibility of maintaining dignity in a world that has lost its moorings. Yet amid the darkness, there are moments of extraordinary beauty and unexpected defiance. The Setting Sun is both a historical document of Japan's traumatic transition and a timeless exploration of how individuals cope when everything they've known crumbles away. Essential reading alongside Dazai's masterpiece No Longer Human, this novel cements Dazai's reputation as one of the most important and influential Japanese writers of the twentieth century. A devastating, unforgettable work of literary art.