Yukio Mishima: Eternal Exclusion and the Tragic Search for Recognition

Yukio Mishima (1925-1970)

Mishima’s Early Years

Kimitake Hiraoka, better known to the world by his pen name of Yukio Mishima, was born in Tokyo in 1925. His first long work The Forest in Full Bloom was published in a magazine called Bungei Bunka in 1941, when Mishima was sixteen years old. In 1943, he entered Tokyo Imperial University where he studied law. In 1944, Mishima had his first major work, The Forest in Full Bloom, published in Tokyo. To have a book published in the last year of the war was considered a great achievement for any Japanese writer, since due to a shortage of paper many books weren’t being published. The publisher printed 4000 copies for the first printing of the book, which completely sold out in one week.

Mishima graduated from Tokyo Imperial University in 1947 and worked for a brief time as an official at the Finance Ministry. During his time at the university, his father had strictly opposed Mishima’s writing. Nevertheless, Mishima continued to write secretly every night, supported and protected by his mother, who was always the first to read a new story. Attending lectures during the day and writing at night, Mishima had exhausted himself so much that his father agreed to his resignation from his position at the Finance Ministry during his first year during his first year of work there. He resigned from the ministry in 1948 and decided to support himself exclusively from his writing.

Mishima with the Governor of Tokyo, 1956

The Literary Years

His first novel, Confessions of a Mask, was published in July of 1949, causing Mishima to be called one of Japan’s most promising new writers. Between 1950 and 1964 Mishima turned out a prolific body of writings ranging from novels, plays, short stories, essays to travel books and articles for magazines. Some the most important and successful novels that were written during this time included: Thirst for Love, Forbidden Colors, The Sailor Who Fell from Grace with the Sea, Silk and Insight, After the Banquet and The Sound of the Waves. In 1956 Mishima published Temple of the Golden Pavilion, his most commercially successful work of this period.

From 1964 to November 25, 1970, Mishima worked on the Sea of Fertility novels. This tetralogy is considered to be his masterwork. Together the four works depict a portrait of Japanese life fom 1912 to 1970. By the time of his death at the age of forty-five, Yukio Mishima had written twenty-four novels, more than forty plays, over ninety short stories, several poetry and travel volumes, and hundreds of essays.

Mishima was nominated for the Nobel Prize for Literature three times and was particularly popular with many foreign publications. However, in 1968 his early mentor Kawabata won the Nobel Prize, and Mishima realized that the chances of it being given to another Japanese author in the near future were slim. It is also believed that Mishima wanted to leave the prize to the aging Kawabata, out of respect for the man who had first introduced him to the literary circles of Tokyo in the 1940s.

The Years of Military Nationalism

In 1967, Mishima enlisted in the Japanese Ground Self Defense Force (GSDF) and underwent basic training. A year later, he formed the Tatenokai, The Shield Society, which was a private army composed primarily of young students who studied martial principles and physical discipline, and swore to protect the emperor. Mishima trained them himself. However, under Mishima’s ideology, the emperor was not necessarily the reigning emperor, but rather the abstract essence of Japan. In Eirei no Koe (Voices of the Heroic Dead) Mishima actually denounced Emperor Hirohito for renouncing his divinity at the end of World War II.

On November 25, 1970, the very same day that he finished the last novel of Sea of Fertiliity, Yukio Mishima and several members of his Shield Society took over a military base in Ichigaya, the Ichigaya Camp that served as the Tokyo headquarters of the Eastern Command of Japan’s Self-Defense Forces. For some time, Mishima had utilized his Shield Society as an endeavor to challenge his country to seriously reconsider the westernized direction that they were taking.

Once inside the main headquarters building, they barricaded the office, held the commandant hostage and demanded the resignation of Japan’s prime minister. With a prepared manifesto and banner listing their demands, Mishima stepped onto the balcony to address the soldiers gathered below. Reading the manifesto to the soldiers who had crowded into the courtyard beneath him, Mishima exhorted them to rise up and save Japan. When his actions failed to rouse the soldiers at Ichigaya to rise up in revolt, he committed seppuka (ritual suicide). He was only 45 years old.

The Life of Yukio Mishima: A Tragic Search for Recognition


Slide Show: Yukio Mishima/The Grief of Eternal Exclusion

(Please Click Image to View Gallery)

Attempts to understand the life and death of Yukio Mishima, as well as his considerable body of published works, are quite possibly helpful in gaining insight about suicide terrorists in the Middle-East today. One might reasonably consider his ideology of nationalistic, perhaps totalitarian, martyrdom as a prelude to the contemporary mythology of martyrdom in Iraq and similar countries.

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4 Responses to “Yukio Mishima: Eternal Exclusion and the Tragic Search for Recognition”

  1. Chris Skel Says:

    Good Lord! Where did you come across the photos in the video? Amazing!

  2. Tom Says:

    Mishima was without a doubt the greatest modern Japanese writer. He is grossly underrated among western literature, where I believe he outshines most anyone, and can be put next to no on in impeccable style, delivery and overall brilliance in his ideas, where fictitious or political. I am intrigued at how you found the highly rare pictures of his death.

    If you have an opportunity, please mail me the packet of pictures that you have displayed on this site.

    -Tom

  3. fche626 Says:

    I loved this post. But not as much as I love Mishima 😛


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