In Thousand Cranes by Yasunari Kawabata, Kikuji is mentioned as living in the shadow of his father. Kawabata uses shade as a leimotif to signify the guilt Kikuji has to live with. Not only does the shade represent guilt, it represents a sense of bewilderment and corruption. The shadow from Mr. Mitani—Kikuji’s father—cast on Kikuji denies Kikuji a life with happiness and excitement. The shadow—Mr. Mitani’s affairs with Mrs. Ota and the other one with Chikako—isolates Kikuji from the outside world, as well as, having a normal relationship with Fumiko or the Inumura girl. The shade, or shadow, which haunts Kikuji wherever he goes, is not the only object following him; fireflies also pursue Kikuji. However, the fireflies symbolize the opposite of the shadow. They represent “light” unlike the shadow, which represents “darkness.” The fireflies also portray the life Kikuji could obtain, if he steps away from the shadow. If Kikuji leaves the shadow left on him by his father, he could have a typical affectionate relationship with Fumiko; however, the fireflies are not always in the same place causing Kikuji trouble to “capture” his happiness. They erratically move around Kikuji flashing their light in one place, and then rapidly resurfacing in another position. The fireflies are “like [the] ghost” of Mr. Mitani (Kawabata 120). They represent Mr. Mitani’s regret of his wrongdoings and a chance of freeing his son—Kikuji—from the same life he lived; however, Kikuji is “poisoned” from Chikako. Chikako tries to live vicariously through Kikuji seeing as she is discontented with her own life. She tries to “poison” him the same way she did with Mr. Mitani. Chikako is jealous of Fumiko for loving Kikuji, the same way Mrs. Ota—Fumiko’s mother—loved Mr. Mitani. Chikako’s “poison” obscures Kikuji’s mentality denying him the opportunity to seize his share of happiness from the “light” of the fireflies overpowering the “darkness” of the
In Thousand Cranes by Yasunari Kawabata, Kikuji is mentioned as living in the shadow of his father. Kawabata uses shade as a leimotif to signify the guilt Kikuji has to live with. Not only does the shade represent guilt, it represents a sense of bewilderment and corruption. The shadow from Mr. Mitani—Kikuji’s father—cast on Kikuji denies Kikuji a life with happiness and excitement. The shadow—Mr. Mitani’s affairs with Mrs. Ota and the other one with Chikako—isolates Kikuji from the outside world, as well as, having a normal relationship with Fumiko or the Inumura girl. The shade, or shadow, which haunts Kikuji wherever he goes, is not the only object following him; fireflies also pursue Kikuji. However, the fireflies symbolize the opposite of the shadow. They represent “light” unlike the shadow, which represents “darkness.” The fireflies also portray the life Kikuji could obtain, if he steps away from the shadow. If Kikuji leaves the shadow left on him by his father, he could have a typical affectionate relationship with Fumiko; however, the fireflies are not always in the same place causing Kikuji trouble to “capture” his happiness. They erratically move around Kikuji flashing their light in one place, and then rapidly resurfacing in another position. The fireflies are “like [the] ghost” of Mr. Mitani (Kawabata 120). They represent Mr. Mitani’s regret of his wrongdoings and a chance of freeing his son—Kikuji—from the same life he lived; however, Kikuji is “poisoned” from Chikako. Chikako tries to live vicariously through Kikuji seeing as she is discontented with her own life. She tries to “poison” him the same way she did with Mr. Mitani. Chikako is jealous of Fumiko for loving Kikuji, the same way Mrs. Ota—Fumiko’s mother—loved Mr. Mitani. Chikako’s “poison” obscures Kikuji’s mentality denying him the opportunity to seize his share of happiness from the “light” of the fireflies overpowering the “darkness” of the