Japan's Threepenny Opera

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Japan's Threepenny Opera (1959) is a novel by Takeshi Kaiko.

The name was derived from Bertold Brecht's Threepenny Opera and in a way is its variant, in the Japanese setting.

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

The novel is based on actual events. It is set in post-World War II Japan. In the middle of Kyoto there are ruins of the Imperial Arsenal demolished by American bombing, full of scrap metal. While the metals are precious in the destroyed economy of Japan, state bureaucracy is extremely slow to recover them. The chance is taken by a settlement of outcasts, lumpen proletariat, who spontaneously organize themselves into brigades to sneak into the Arsenal and scavenge the scrap. Reporters dubbed them Apaches, after the Native American Apache tribe, and they accepted the name.

The novel seemingly has no positive heroes, it is intentionally anti-aesthetical, but the reader feels sympathy for these people strugging for life in the miniature copy of the capitalist society with all its attributes: division of labour, exploitation, hard toil and the dream to get rich quick.

Since this novel the term "apache" entered the Japanese language to denote scavengers of recyclables, e.g., of scrap paper.[1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Companies, scavengers scrap over recycled paper in Japan a November 21, 2004 Los Angeles Times article