Abstract: | ABSTRACT: Within the last few years, two world-famous Japanese writers have committed suicide. Kawabata represents the chrysanthemum aspect of Japanese culture and resignation-despair. Mishima symbolizes the sword aspect and aggression. Kawabata described loneliness-helplessness and Mishima an ecstasy under the threat of imminent death. Their different childhood experiences produced an “orphan” complex in Kawabata and the problem of sexual identity with an inferiority complex in Mishima. The former sublimated his complex in literature, the latter overreacted to it. For both, an immediate cause of suicide was the conflict between their ideal and the postwar reality. For Mishima, there were also occasions that gave vital blows to his extremely narcissistic temperament. |