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Politica de confidentialitate |
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• domnisoara hus • legume • istoria unui galban • metanol • recapitulare • profitul • caract • comentariu liric • radiolocatia • praslea cel voinic si merele da aur | |
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Shogun | ||||||
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In 1975, Clavell published Shogun, his magnum opus that took the literary critics
by storm. New York Times book reviewer Webster Schott wrote, “Clavell
has a gift, he breathes narrative; his hero is not a person but a place and
a time, medieval Japan on the threshold of becoming a sea power” (Schott
1975). The novel seized the popular imagination, and Blackthorne, Toranaga,
Lady Mariko, arigato, and konnichi-wa soon became household words among his
readers. Book sales exceeded seven million copies. Eric Majors, a personal friend
of Clavell’s associated with Hodder and Stoughton publishers, explained
the huge popularity of the book by saying: “It took the Western mind into
a completely different world. It was the first time that one began to understand
the Japanese.” Indeed, Shogun is considered to be one of the most effective
depictions of cross-cultural encounters ever written. t8x22xd Shogun’s sophistication about the clash of cultures has much to teach modern readers and would make Clavell an important writer quite apart from his other efforts. However, his striking image patterns, the tensions between his personal history as a war-time prisoner of the Japanese and his urge for fairness, the detailed descriptions that vividly bring to life an historical moment and yet make a modern statement, his masterful control of perception, and, most of all, his in-depth psycho-analytical study of characters distanced by both time and culture yet endowed with life and spirit make this his finest work—one that deserves closer critical attention than it has received. |
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