by zayg » Wed Jan 07, 2015 11:08 am
Just plowed through Sputnik Sweetheart in two days. I enjoyed reading it as it certainly was different from most Murakami in that I felt that I actually had a more thorough understanding of the themes. Generally I feel as if they are hidden behind a shroud of cultural differences that I have difficulty relating to, but in this case, there seemed to be some pretty obvious themes about loneliness and especially assimilation into a conformist society. Going "into the other side" almost seemed to me as if it was a separation from one's idealistic youth, but as time went on, I realized this only really applied to Sumire. Miu's entering of the other side resulted in her leaving her dreams and passions behind, but it was not as a result of trying to assimilate into society as directly as Sumire did. Finally, the narrator's entering into "the other side" was pretty unclear to me, as was the entire ending. I know with Murakami you should never take things too seriously or literally as they don't all have some deeper meaning, but it is fun to speculate.
While reading up about the story online, I realized someone made a point that the disappearance of female characters was a common theme. I've only read four Murakami novels, but in those four (Kafka, Wind-up Bird, Sputnik, Norwegian Wood), a woman is taken from the protagonist in some way in each of them. Is this common in his other novels? Is this supposed to represent something? I don't know enough to really have an opinion on the matter, but I was speculating that perhaps it represents a gradual removal of traditional gender roles in Japan in which women were (often still are from what I understand) seen as a tool of comfort by men. With women being less pigeonholed into a comforting, almost motherly-yet-subservient role, Japanese men were left to adapt to a society in which gender roles changed dramatically in a short period of time. Perhaps my analysis is wrong, but I feel that the taking of women from the men in these stories represents a Japan in which changing gender roles results in an introspective journey in which the protagonists need to find out how they relate to this changing dynamic and better themselves because of it. Of course, this is extremely simplified as each story is quite different with some very different outcomes. I actually enjoyed seeing some character progression in Sputnik Sweetheart, which seems to be fairly rare in Murakami's protagonists.