Numbness of the Mind Paradigm in Haruki Murakami’s After the Quake and Iraq’s After the Quake

Authors

  • Iman Abdulsattar Abdulatif Department of English, College of Languages, University of Baghdad.

Keywords:

despair, numbness of the mind, evil, unprotected, earthquake, self-fulfillment

Abstract

Haruki Murakami (1949-present) is a contemporary Japanese writer whose works have been translated into fifty languages and won him plenty of Japanese and international awards. His short stories are well constructed in a weird realistic manner and are mixed with elements of surrealism. His novels and short stories fall under the genre of magical realism. One of the major revolving themes that Murakami wrote about was the haunting feeling of emptiness and disconnectedness in a world which seems to care much for materialism and self-interests.

    The paper explores two of Murakami’s short stories in his book After the Quake (2000) and the relevance of their themes and characters to Iraq after the quake. Literally, Iraq may never have witnessed a real earthquake, but one can say its metaphorical meaning has a great implication upon the lives of its people. The reference to Iraq after the quake in this paper would focus on the aftermath of the 2003 War such as: the feeling of disconnection among people, disinclination in life, feelings of deprivation and depreciation, and the corruption of leaders and politicians. Likewise, though Murakami’s short stories chosen in this paper do not deal with the actual earthquake, its implications can be felt as we read the stories. His characters witness a sense of disconnectedness and the feeling of being unappreciated even when they do the hardest and most dangerous jobs.

    Two of Murakami’s short stories “UFO in Kushiro” and “Super Frog Saves Tokyo” are tackled to show the paradigm and comparison between the lives of these characters (that are actually a reflection of Japanese lives in mid 1990s) and the restricted depressing life of the Iraqis in the postwar era of the 2003 War. Both have experienced fragmentation, despair and lack of self-worth due to the reasons that are explained in this paper. The Iraqis however, may have experienced a deeper suffering where one can say they have reached a state of the numbness or enslavement of the mind and feelings. The paper also highlights that animosity should be dissipated from the hearts of people specifically in politicians and top leaders. Though it is a complicated world, man should conceive that the prosperity of mankind rests in his own hands. Cherishing the diversity of cultures and understanding each other’s moral principles are the means to diminish evil in order to reach the desired bliss.

Author Biography

  • Iman Abdulsattar Abdulatif, Department of English, College of Languages, University of Baghdad.

     Iman Abdulsattar Abdulatif, M.A., is an Assistant Professor at the department of English/College of Languages/University of Baghdad. I have taught Victorian and modern novel and currently I teach conversation and communication skills. I participated in a number of conferences in America and UAE. I have also published ten papers regarding my field of specialization, novel. My other interests are teaching ESL and EFL.

    Email: [email protected]

Published

2017-01-01

Issue

Section

Department of Russian Language

How to Cite

Numbness of the Mind Paradigm in Haruki Murakami’s After the Quake and Iraq’s After the Quake. (2017). Journal of the College of Languages (JCL), 35, 14-38. https://jcolang.uobaghdad.edu.iq/index.php/JCL/article/view/12

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