On Osamu Dazai's Last Work "Disqualification on Earth"
Regarding women, the representative role is Yoshiko. What a gentle, pure and traditional Japanese woman as big as Nadeshiko. Ye Zang evaluated her as a goddess. As for being NTR, we must first review Ye Zang himself. Ye Zang grew up in an excellent family, but his sense of inferiority and powerlessness is extremely serious, which comes from his dislike of mutual use in interpersonal communication (Ye Zang's father is a member of parliament). Because of Ye Zang's strong inferiority and world-weariness, he developed a good habit of escaping, which is almost the same as the original works of Ikari. As a painter, he never thought that his paintings would be popular. I was confident twice. One is that the editor lives together, and the other is that I have been married to Yoshiko for some time. Yoshiko's adultery with the editor was discovered by Ye Zang, so Yoshiko felt guilty and wanted to commit suicide, and was stopped by Ye Zang. -pay attention to here, actually not because of guilt, but because of Ye Zang's distrust of him. As for adultery, it's just a unilateral brain tonic in Ye Zang's mind. The proprietress put all the responsibilities on Ye Zang's father in one sentence, which is probably based on the background of the times. Although the Japanese imperial society at that time was thriving on the surface, it was actually full of crises and hidden dangers. Because of this, the pressure brought by society to civilians is increasing, and most people who adapt to this phenomenon will be distorted. On the other hand, Ye Zang is still as naive as a child. Obviously, thinking with this naive idea can't survive in this social situation, and in the end it can only be excluded and expelled. The proprietress said that even if he drank it, he was a lovely child as a god. It is implicitly explained that those women who come into contact with Ye Zang only regard him as a "child", and (perhaps for this reason, Yoshiko regards herself as the mother who takes care of Ye Zang. ... I feel that this word order is not quite right. In a word, social pressure distorts people's character. It is also possible to compare the society of the Republic of China under the Kuomintang rule.