February 13, 2022 <Back to Index>
PAGE SPONSOR |
Sakunosuke Oda (織田 作之助 Oda Sakunosuke , born October 26, 1913 - January 10, 1947) was a Japanese writer. He is often grouped together with Osamu Dazai and Ango Sakaguchi as the Buraiha. Literally meaning ruffian or hoodlum faction, this label was not a matter of a stylistic school but one bestowed upon them by conservative critics disparaging the authors' attitudes and subject matter. Oda’s writing career spans both prewar and postwar Japan. An Osaka native, he wrote mostly of life in Osaka and the customs and manners of the common people. In 1939, his story Zokushu (俗臭) was a candidate for the Akutagawa Prize. The following year, he published Meoto Zenzai (夫婦善哉). Named after an Osaka sweet shop, it follows the life of a couple whose relationship survives despite the persistent wastefulness, debauchery and unkempt promises of the erring man. Oda's characters usually did not fit into what were traditionally considered appropriate either in their humanness or their stubborn individuality as in Roppakukinsei (六白金星), or out of the cruel necessity of survival. In the story Sesō, Oda described the first months of the occupation period following Japan's surrender to end World War II which were marked by food shortages so severe that government rations were not enough even to sustain life: People were forced to turn to the black market just to procure the food they needed for their own survival. Meoto zenzai, Roppakukinsei, and Sesō, along with another story, Ki no miyako (木の都, 1943 – 44), have been translated by Burton Watson and published together as Stories of Osaka Life (Columbia University Press, 1990; Weatherhill, 1994). During his lifetime, several of his works were banned, but he was also championed by others for his ability to write candidly about the human condition with the sympathy and wit for which his native Osaka is famous. As well as being a fiction writer, he wrote radio drama scenarios and submitted a script to a magazine that was later made into the film Kaette kita otoko, by Kawashima Yuzo, that director's first commercial feature. In 1947, suffering from a lung hemorrhage, Oda died in Tokyo Hospital. After the funeral, Osamu Dazai, his friend and fellow writer, published an emotional eulogy blaming the critics for Oda’s sudden death. More likely, it was from a recurrent bout of tuberculosis. He is buried in Osaka. In 1963, a monument was erected by his friends and colleagues near Hozenji Temple in Osaka. Hozenji Yokochō and its surrounding alleys were the setting for Meoto Zenzai. In 1983, under the sponsorship of the Osaka Bungaku Shinkōkai, a literary prize was established in Oda's name to commemorate the 70th anniversary of his birth with the aim of carrying on the long tradition of Kansai literature. It is awarded annually to an outstanding work of fiction by a new author. An inscribed photograph of Oda hangs in the Osaka restaurant Jiyūken (自由軒). Jiyūken opened as a coffee and snack shop in 1910 and has become known for its style of "curry rice". The shop appeared in Oda's writing. The inscription says that author Oda has passed on but left us some of the good curry rice flavor in his writing. The autographed photograph shows Oda apparently at work on his writing seated at a table in Jiyūken. |