Jack Edwards on Haruki Murakami's problematic portrayal of women

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  • Опубліковано 20 бер 2023
  • This clip is from Episode #010 of my podcast featuring Jack Edwards (the King of BookTube).
    Booktube and Booktok and the nicknames given to the community that has developed on UA-cam and Tiktok around books, book reviews and culture connecting to and stemming from them.
    We discussed his rise on UA-cam, the value of Shorts, Twitter and online discourse and how to deconstruct art (among other things).
    I hope you enjoy.
    Listen to the audio version of the podcast → anchor.fm/nobackupplan
    Newsletter 🍦→ www.nathanieldrew.com/newsletter
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    ------------
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    The original Nathaniel Drew x Tom Fox soundtrack → www.nathanieldrew.com/nathani...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 611

  • @meuthianabilapratiwi5535
    @meuthianabilapratiwi5535 Рік тому +3674

    that's what i hate from murakami hahah but damn no author can describe loneliness and heartbreak THAT DEEP AND BEAUTIFUL

    • @namkia205
      @namkia205 Рік тому +108

      His male characters are great and complex only his women suck his stories are great and so is his prose decide for yourself if you can try to don't mind the horrible female characters if you like the elements I first mentioned

    • @jellykd
      @jellykd 11 місяців тому +33

      @@namkia205 Wow interesting, I didn't find his male characters very complex, although I've only read norwegian wood and didn't like it very much.

    • @namkia205
      @namkia205 11 місяців тому +32

      @@jellykd That's by far his worst book and he has at least one great female character, she's a kid though so no woman. Her name is May and she's from the wind-up bird chronicles. The others were so weird and useless.

    • @a.c.7573
      @a.c.7573 11 місяців тому +10

      @@namkia205 Imo the women in After Dark were written pretty well

    • @calin5422
      @calin5422 11 місяців тому +24

      @@namkia205 i personally think that murakami's female characters are more like hit or miss rather than straight up bad. For example Naoko was pretty complex and had a lot of depth, as well as Saeki from Kafka on the shore.

  • @namkia205
    @namkia205 Рік тому +2328

    That's why his books without women or where they aren't the focus are the best he just can't write women 💀

    • @micaeladiaz8418
      @micaeladiaz8418 Рік тому +60

      Which ones are the ones where he doesnt mention women? Bc i would like to read those and not the other ones

    • @iammethefoo
      @iammethefoo 11 місяців тому +40

      @@micaeladiaz8418I liked the strange library, it’s just a short story of his

    • @sirgawain6844
      @sirgawain6844 11 місяців тому +25

      Writing women in the eyes of men who objectify them is what you call 'can't write women' ?
      you failed to understand what is 'fictional writing' in the first place .

    • @rose-nn3wj
      @rose-nn3wj 11 місяців тому +187

      @@sirgawain6844Tf are you even saying 💀

    • @allyabellana3964
      @allyabellana3964 11 місяців тому +213

      ⁠@@sirgawain6844 that’s jack’s whole point i think. You can interpret it as murakami intentionally writing the misgonystic thinking of a 19 year old for fiction’s sake, but the end of this clip kinda hints that murakami just thinks that way…

  • @gaelliott61
    @gaelliott61 Рік тому +3377

    It’s good that you’re looking at the cultural and historical lens through which he viewed the world. A cloudy, misogynist lens it was, apparently.

    • @Ali-pk8qs
      @Ali-pk8qs Рік тому +12

      I am not western and I am not sure what is going on there really sorry for you.

    • @Ali-pk8qs
      @Ali-pk8qs Рік тому +48

      You guys build a form of dicatatorship which even artists are blamed if there was a really racist or sexist person i would agree with you but it is just stupid. Its just a form of art and experssion ıts nothing to be getting offended about.

    • @littlegirlblue6326
      @littlegirlblue6326 Рік тому +40

      better than sheltering yourself into thinking everyone has sunshine and rainbows for morals 🤷🏻‍♀️

    • @lilicake4208
      @lilicake4208 Рік тому +96

      A lot of people don't understand how others can get upset or feel uncomfortable about this things either, and say " Oh its just the way the world works " but forget that for a lot of them that is the continous reality and they're allowed to be upset by things that effect them directly while people who normally say that most probably never had an ounce of experience in such matter.
      After finding out how he sees women, I don't feel comfortable enough to continue reading his works because enough men sexualise women in real life, I don't need that in a fiction.

    • @lilicake4208
      @lilicake4208 Рік тому +76

      ​@@Ali-pk8qs Do you struggle to comprehend what was being said?
      Jack Edwards said that in an interview Haruki Murakami himself said that he sees women that way, not his characters.

  • @EmmarainePink
    @EmmarainePink 7 місяців тому +360

    Literally reading Kafka On The Shore rn and yes, I love the metaphorical and philosophical stuff on it, yes, I think it's magical, but also yes, he's SHIT with women. It's just so confusing and honestly pulls me out of the story- like why is almost every scene with women HAS to talk about their vaginas or having intercourse?? Like usually that's no problem but when it happens almost every single time??? Jesus, Murakami.
    Literally any scene: so btw I have some important information-
    Murakami's women: OH YEAH ABOUT MY VAGINA, MY PERIOD, AND SEX LIFE-
    Like dude, genuinely, _w h a t?_

    • @laurasalo6160
      @laurasalo6160 7 місяців тому +2

      Maybe he once had to suffer a female just like that.

    • @KristianaCembre
      @KristianaCembre 5 місяців тому

      @@laurasalo6160which fine if that’s how he writes A woman in a singular book, but that’s how he has written women in all of his books. It’s just how he views women, not as people but as an amorphous vagina.

    • @ohnoitsthenoooo
      @ohnoitsthenoooo 5 місяців тому

      ​@@laurasalo6160begone, incel

    • @fey0217
      @fey0217 3 місяці тому

      kafka on the beach is particularly disturbing because of the incest. like alright i get it. this is murakami's modern take on oedipus rex and his way of exploring the concept of fate and destiny. but at least oedipus didn't know he screwed his mom. kafka was like "who cares if she's my mom she's hot! i'll screw my sister too while i'm at it!" like bro 💀

    • @redsol3629
      @redsol3629 3 місяці тому +3

      He's been married to a woman for years, maybe that is all she talks about. Women write about the men they want, men write about the women they have known, especially the ones who have hurt them.

  • @chacharealsmooth4147
    @chacharealsmooth4147 10 місяців тому +312

    Oooh my god, i knew i wasn't crazy for thinking he just can't write female characters.

  • @nathalykim1263
    @nathalykim1263 Рік тому +1804

    I've never seen Jack have an unreasonable or bad take on anything if I'm being honest

    • @gyrosbomber81247
      @gyrosbomber81247 Рік тому +102

      He doesn't like the lord of the rings......

    • @-ana_banana-2098
      @-ana_banana-2098 Рік тому +85

      @@gyrosbomber81247 fair enough

    • @ahnmensch3115
      @ahnmensch3115 Рік тому +82

      yeah, his takes on Lord of the Rings and Dune are questionable.

    • @travasses
      @travasses Рік тому +24

      he thinks dune is bad....

    • @callnight1441
      @callnight1441 Рік тому +131

      @@ahnmensch3115 dune is not for everyone and LOTR can be pretty slow at times. I would say they are actually fairly reasonable takes. Also, he never said they were bad or that he hated them; he just said they werent for him

  • @sawaizriaz7230
    @sawaizriaz7230 Рік тому +701

    I wrote my Undergrad Dissertation last year on Murakami's portrayal of women in his Literature. It's suchhhhhh a problematic representation, that any sane person would find it hard to ignore.

    • @pouetpouetdaddy5
      @pouetpouetdaddy5 11 місяців тому +15

      seem not very sane to me, poor baby woke

    • @bennoay3424
      @bennoay3424 10 місяців тому +10

      Would you let me read it please?

    • @nikagrimm7197
      @nikagrimm7197 10 місяців тому +7

      I've only noticed after it fucked me up😬

    • @OmmerSyssel
      @OmmerSyssel 10 місяців тому

      😂 Congratulations woke clown! You found something outrageous..
      That's exactly what Art is about
      Grow up, and have fun in your gorgeous bubble world

    • @nishthagupta1357
      @nishthagupta1357 10 місяців тому

      Omg yes

  • @jennymesas4699
    @jennymesas4699 Рік тому +372

    His latest book of short stories has SO many disturbing lines about women that it's been months and I still can't finish it

    • @btsislifeu6081
      @btsislifeu6081 10 місяців тому +6

      Will you please tell me the name of these short stories i want to read them

    • @jennymesas4699
      @jennymesas4699 10 місяців тому +47

      @@btsislifeu6081 i think in English it's called First person singular, there are a few very charming stories, but damn those disturbing characterizations of women almost ruin the entire book for me

    • @kejeso8736
      @kejeso8736 10 місяців тому +39

      If one has to go so moral when reading literature, the best thing to do is not reading at all. Calm down a bit.

    • @kejeso8736
      @kejeso8736 10 місяців тому +3

      If one has to go so moral when reading literature, the best thing to do is not reading at all. Calm down a bit.

    • @jennymesas4699
      @jennymesas4699 10 місяців тому +135

      @@kejeso8736 it's not about going moral, if it was about that I wouldn't buy every book he writes, it's about the descriptions/lines about women literally making me cringe lmao and usually I like being uncomfortable when reading, but this wasn't an enjoyable experience in my opinion

  • @banhbae
    @banhbae 9 місяців тому +168

    i think cari can read put it best in one of her videos, where murakami's misogyny is so on the other side of the spectrum that, when interviewed about it, he literally has no idea it's misogynist. instead of hating women or seeing them as objects, he instead just does not understand them. at all. they're just these mythical fantastical creatures outside the realm of his understanding, which is still in the realm of misogyny and why his portrayal of women is still problematic because it's still dehumanizing

    • @kafkasbugmusic
      @kafkasbugmusic 7 місяців тому +5

      You clearly don't know the definition of misogyny... You should have said "sexist".

    • @RougeDeBlah
      @RougeDeBlah 6 місяців тому

      Cope

    • @V---L
      @V---L 6 місяців тому +8

      Misogyny is by definition hating women. So, simply by your definition, you are wrong. Sexism, that's more adequate.

    • @santiagomm3878
      @santiagomm3878 5 місяців тому +6

      I don't really get what's so misogynistic about idealizing women. Our modern conception of love is literally born from literature and traditional songs or customs where women were portrayed as perfect or mythical incomprehensible beings

    • @tapewoerm
      @tapewoerm 4 місяці тому +32

      @@santiagomm3878
      Not viewing women as humans who are nuanced with flaws and only seeing them as this sexualised perfection objectifies them. Women are real human beings, not just something sexy to look at. It also reinforces misogynistic stereotypes like beauty/sex is all a woman is good for.

  • @Starburst514
    @Starburst514 10 місяців тому +554

    Personally (as a woman) his writing doesn't necessarily make them tits on legs, but more like these mythical creatures, like you look at his male protagonists; they're all usually lonely and pathetic, and sad, and incompetent, and then this sexy, smart woman who has it all together and is like doing stuff off screen comes and makes him less pathetic; so to me it's like the misogyny is on the other end of the spectrum
    He portrays women as these mysterious mythical, amazing , creatures that are so above the men they encounter; he puts them in a pedestal thus not making them people either, but also not tits on legs (again to me)
    So it's more like the benin sexists I know who idealize women to the point of being flawless, so it's not good either, but I think that's why he seemed confused about being called sexist

    • @zurzakne-etra7069
      @zurzakne-etra7069 9 місяців тому +49

      tbh tho, it is a reflection of the way many japanese men treat women...

    • @maggyfrog
      @maggyfrog 9 місяців тому +51

      yes exactly. the more you look at all his characters, the more you realize he only writes about strange characters. it would not make sense if he wrote about "realistic" women especially as a pov character and then all the men are these bizarre loners. there's an excess of strangeness that's always a core aspect of his main characters and to alter that to fit in to appease readers actually makes his writing somewhat insincere. pov women are simply not his forte and it's better when he writes them in the pov of a male character as it comes off more sincere, which is why people find that "problematic" because his men don't actually understand women no matter how much they are captivated by them. i much prefer it when i disagree with a writer's honesty than be coddled with what the writer perceives is the "correct way of thinking"

    • @Chan-zn7wb
      @Chan-zn7wb 8 місяців тому +29

      So like a Japanese 'Manic Pixie Dream Girl'?

    • @maggyfrog
      @maggyfrog 8 місяців тому +14

      @@Givebackthescarf
      i think you misunderstand my comment. i read his characters like they don't understand women fundamentally. i do remember this character and that's exactly how i viewed the guy. this line of talk from real life men is not so uncommon. i've heard women be described in such a way by real life men, unfortunately.
      i don't think he has ever written a single male protagonist that has a proper understanding of women or women's nature. that's the core of this entire issue with murakami. people like yourself have a problem with the fact that he doesn't write from the POV of a gentleman.
      even the protagonist of the wind-up bird chronicle fundamentally doesn't understand why his wife left him, and that character is one of the more decent protagonists he wrote.
      the few times he attempted to write in the POV of a woman, i'm telling you, her female protags are very strange. it's better that he sticks to the POV of weird men. his portrayal of their befuddlement or misogyny towards women is actually pretty honest.

    • @laurasalo6160
      @laurasalo6160 7 місяців тому +1

      ​@@maggyfrogamen!

  • @usersYT
    @usersYT 10 місяців тому +114

    True... Was never able to finish Kafka on the shore because of the way the writer describes women (every single time the protagonist sees a woman or even a girl).

    • @YatashaPenguin
      @YatashaPenguin 10 місяців тому +19

      Stop being so sensitive.

    • @blackcatinoctober
      @blackcatinoctober 9 місяців тому

      Don’t finish it unless you also like incest and pedophilia ✌️

    • @Carolina-rd3gh
      @Carolina-rd3gh 9 місяців тому +131

      @@YatashaPenguin Stop being so dismissive

    • @maggyfrog
      @maggyfrog 9 місяців тому +12

      this is probably one of his best works. definitely gives you an insight into how that type of objectification comes about. all in all, i'm glad this was the first one i read by murakami. i immediately realized that all his characters are bonkers especially the men. if you read his books with that perspective, this writer is one of the most honest, non-pretentious living writer you can come across in pretty much any bookstore.

    • @EmmarainePink
      @EmmarainePink 7 місяців тому +19

      ​@@maggyfrogWith what perspective, exactly? I'm not trying to argue or anything, by the way. I'm genuinely asking because I'm reading it right now and it's also my first of his works, but it's making me uncomfortable and confused. Not necessarily the "stop harassing me!" type of uncomfortable, but the "dude what the fuck?" type of uncomfortable. It breaks my immersion and pulls me out of the story. It's truly making me sad because the plot so far is so interesting.

  • @khyrianstorms
    @khyrianstorms 7 місяців тому +29

    All of his books have this objectifying. Norwegian Woods has a sex scene where a 40-year-old gets raped by a 13-year-old, a girl that is suicidal but also wants to have sexual experiences all the time despite not loving him and Midori, who loves going to BDSM cinema and wants to be thought about when the protagonist is masturbating. Hard Boiled Wonderland has the secretary in the hallway, only described by her hips. Wild Sheep Chase has the iconic "The girl who everyone had sex with, but no one knew her name". And this weakness is jarring, as for the rest, he is a wonderful writer. But that element is problematic.

    • @prachiagarwal8271
      @prachiagarwal8271 7 місяців тому +7

      These sound really disturbing! I recently got two of his books but now I'm seriously scared about starting them.

    • @RougeDeBlah
      @RougeDeBlah 6 місяців тому +5

      ​@@prachiagarwal8271it's not that bad, I read Norwegian wood recently and it was a really nice read. I wasn't a huge fan of all the sex, majority of it was unnecessary but didn't detract too much from it imo

    • @georginatoland
      @georginatoland 5 місяців тому +6

      Thank you for the warning. I am NEVER going to read this author now.

    • @jesusrodriguez2533
      @jesusrodriguez2533 2 місяці тому +1

      @@georginatolandwhy not reading it first and having your own lmao

    • @maryvampiregirl666
      @maryvampiregirl666 2 місяці тому +2

      ​@@georginatoland do you ever form your own opinions?

  • @meghna7057
    @meghna7057 5 місяців тому +22

    The problem is he does it in almost every other book. Sure you wanna portray a misogynist once, but once you start doing all the effing time it starts to become a problematic pattern. And remember women are also reading your books and it can be traumatic for us to be portrayed like that. I had to drop many murakami books because of how disturbed they'd make me feel.

    • @santiagomm3878
      @santiagomm3878 5 місяців тому +1

      What's traumatic about an objectifying depiction of fictional women in a fictional setting? Even if it disgusts you that doesn't take away anything from the overall message and beauty of his works

    • @pallavi323
      @pallavi323 4 місяці тому +3

      TRUE. Never gonna try reading his books again.

    • @meghna7057
      @meghna7057 4 місяці тому +6

      @@santiagomm3878 fiction mirrors and is intricately linked to reality and fiction also holds the power to deeply influence people. Also what he writes about women in his book is not his unique fictional creation, objectification of women is a very real thing which can trigger unpleasant emotions. I’m not promoting censorship but rather inclusivity.

    • @meghna7057
      @meghna7057 4 місяці тому +1

      @@santiagomm3878 I never said anything about the beauty of the message tho and if that’s a compromise some readers are willing to make, then sure. Some will be bothered , some won’t be bothered. But all I’m asking is male writers should try and start to look at women as humans and not objects

    • @santiagomm3878
      @santiagomm3878 4 місяці тому

      @@meghna7057 you are not promoting inclusivity in incentivizing people not to read Murakami. Poetry is fiction in the sense that it's literature and not factual. Poetry can be really about anthing. That's justa n example. His books aren't just the historical reality of Japan, they are also, in a way, lyrical in nature

  • @apoorvapatwardhan
    @apoorvapatwardhan 8 місяців тому +43

    I read kafka on the shore because it was so hyped up, and the way he wrote his women bothered me throughout the book. But the book is so incredibly overrated that I couldn't find too many negative opinions on it. Thinking maybe I judged too hard, I decided to give him another try and went for Men without Women. Now this book enraged me. Because every single woman was reduced to her looks, and while the men were all really average and at times even pathetic, they all somehow seemed to have way more character and personality than the women.

    • @MiyukiixxZ
      @MiyukiixxZ 5 місяців тому +6

      Exactly. too overrated. from the second he described Sakura i KNEW just exactly what kind of Author he is.

    • @apoorvapatwardhan
      @apoorvapatwardhan 5 місяців тому

      @@MiyukiixxZ right??!

    • @santiagomm3878
      @santiagomm3878 5 місяців тому +5

      You didn't understand his style of writing, that's fine, but don't call him overrated when all you got from his books was annoyance

    • @MiyukiixxZ
      @MiyukiixxZ 5 місяців тому +14

      @@santiagomm3878 Oversexualizing women is not a style

    • @apoorvapatwardhan
      @apoorvapatwardhan 5 місяців тому

      @@santiagomm3878
      'No matter how you looked at her she was hardly a beauty, and there was
      something off-putting about her face',
      'Beneath the white long-sleeved T-shirt under her jacket Kafuku could see her
      larger-than-average breasts.'
      'Stuck-up, flat-chested, with a funny-looking nose and a nonet oo-wonderful personality'

  • @nomadine85
    @nomadine85 7 місяців тому +17

    I started reading one of his books a decade ago and I was so disturbed by his depiction of women and just… I couldn’t continue and I’m upset by it because I feel like I’m missing out but I just can’t keep reading something that makes me want to throw up on the author

    • @santiagomm3878
      @santiagomm3878 5 місяців тому +1

      you're so sensitive

    • @nomadine85
      @nomadine85 4 місяці тому

      @@santiagomm3878 I am, yeah

    • @user-xo5ej7vu1b
      @user-xo5ej7vu1b Місяць тому +1

      @@santiagomm3878 you're so dismissive and not understanding

    • @user-xo5ej7vu1b
      @user-xo5ej7vu1b Місяць тому

      HONESTLY SAME. Could not complete kafka on the shore and everyone likes him so much and i liked some aspects of the book so I wanted to read it but I just can't- i can't get over that part.

  • @feelinguru-vywiththepaingu9808
    @feelinguru-vywiththepaingu9808 5 місяців тому +23

    "Tits on legs." Yep. That's exactly right.

  • @hanananf
    @hanananf 18 днів тому +3

    The reason I start reading again is haruki murakami …i just love him

  • @essxsolo
    @essxsolo 10 місяців тому +93

    And then he writes from the perspective of a woman (1q84) and it's literally the same take - that was it for me

  • @katty.s
    @katty.s 2 місяці тому +1

    What a treat, Jack and Nathaniel in the same room!! The collab we didn’t know we needed 😊

  • @user-kc8py2kg4g
    @user-kc8py2kg4g 10 місяців тому +10

    It happens in every single one of his books

  • @ataraxicmoon1255
    @ataraxicmoon1255 11 днів тому +3

    idk man, i questioned a lot of things while reading 'after dark', pointed out a lot of things, i found some things a little uncomfortable but there is something about his books that pulls you in and you can't just ignore it. on my way to order another book of his, coz man, his writing style is so my type and i kinda want more and more.

  • @EmmarainePink
    @EmmarainePink 7 місяців тому +5

    Literally reading Kafka On The Shore rn and yes, I love the metaphorical and philosophical stuff on it, yes, I think it's magical, but also yes, he's SHIT with women. It's just so confusing and honestly pulls me out of the story- like why is almost every scene with women HAS to talk about their vaginas or having intercourse?? Like usually that's no problem but when it happens almost every single time??? Jesus, Murakami.

    • @cokesucker9520
      @cokesucker9520 2 місяці тому

      The main character is a 15 year old boy, contemplate what that means.

  • @jaxmaberry1720
    @jaxmaberry1720 6 місяців тому +36

    Just started Norwegian Wood and in the first 20 or so pages he mentions how much weight Naoko has lost in just a year and how she looks so much prettier now, so I’m glad to hear it’s widely known he has some problematic takes. That description of her rubbed me the wrong way immediately.

    • @ravent3016
      @ravent3016 5 місяців тому +2

      I DNF'd that book and the movie.

    • @alexisuneza7975
      @alexisuneza7975 5 місяців тому +4

      How about the end of the book? The main character fucking Naoko’s nurse after she dies just because she was an option threw me off badly, it was so disgusting.

    • @santiagomm3878
      @santiagomm3878 5 місяців тому +1

      Don't women care just as much about their appearance and criticize each other even more then men?

    • @Hello-hello-hello456
      @Hello-hello-hello456 2 місяці тому +1

      ​@@santiagomm3878It's just a generalization. Not everyone is like this.

  • @julietcat
    @julietcat 3 місяці тому

    Omg ☺️ Love to see you engage in a conversation. How interesting to see you two together ✨

  • @kimoraking676
    @kimoraking676 6 місяців тому +5

    So this "murakami depiction" of women as being problematic and misogynistic is a concrete and undeniable fact?

    • @Ryo-jb4zn
      @Ryo-jb4zn 6 місяців тому +7

      It's pretty obvious for anyone with more than dog level intelligence.

  • @Readerreflections
    @Readerreflections 4 місяці тому +3

    currently reading kafta on shore and i can understand your points

  • @basonpham6463
    @basonpham6463 11 місяців тому +168

    I've read 3 books from him thus far. I found his portrait of women can be described as "fantasizing" rather than "objectifying". Maybe it's just me.

    • @Rash23215
      @Rash23215 11 місяців тому +41

      It's not just u.... There are many mysoginists like u....

    • @anthonyt219
      @anthonyt219 11 місяців тому

      ​​​@@Rash23215 that word is being thrown around at people to the point its cringe and annoying.
      Tell me, are you gonna call me or him a racist too?
      No wonder people bitch about liberals so much.

    • @rthraitor
      @rthraitor 10 місяців тому +30

      @@Rash23215come on man lol I’m reading Norwegian wood and I will say while the portrayal of the women in the book is very sexualised the 2 main women in the book are actual characters who besides the over sexualisation are very well written

    • @MFDOOOOM
      @MFDOOOOM 9 місяців тому

      ​@@Rash23215cry about it

    • @EmmarainePink
      @EmmarainePink 7 місяців тому +11

      ​@@rthraitorThat's exactly it. Like, obviously he writes good but the oversexualizing ruins it for me. It's like watching a good show but the fanservice is just too much.

  • @scottthescottish
    @scottthescottish 4 місяці тому +2

    He is an exceptional writer, and no other auther that I know of can capture his level of intense emotion. Also, he can write women with depth.. Not Because he oversexualize them that me he can't make them feel real at times. I hate how he sexualize everything, but he gives alot more than what he takes.

  • @HM-mw7cg
    @HM-mw7cg 3 місяці тому +7

    People who say he can’t write women haven’t read much murakami. His short stories featuring female leads are some of the best portrayals of women ever committed to a page. Also he said a lot more in that interview on the subject, and the interviewer, an author herself, credited him for his story Sleep, and said it was the best writing of a woman by a male author that she’d ever read

  • @serine4044
    @serine4044 5 місяців тому +3

    Finally someone saying this out loud ... I was shocked when I first read one of his books ... he's soo overrated

  • @qwerkywriter7134
    @qwerkywriter7134 5 місяців тому

    Funny, insightful, and fantastic editing! Subscribed ❤️

  • @papl20
    @papl20 10 місяців тому +13

    I'm a woman and fucking love Murakami but he's sooo problematic in this sense

    • @OmmerSyssel
      @OmmerSyssel 10 місяців тому

      Ever found something NOT disturbing your rosy bubble world?
      Art isn't about pleasuring the narrow minded or intolerant hypocrite!
      Now go berserk.. 😅

    • @mAm25124
      @mAm25124 7 місяців тому

      Such an easy throwaway word

  • @nickoffury
    @nickoffury 3 місяці тому +1

    This is the first time I’ve seen a video where Jack hasn’t mentioned his literature degree

  • @FlywithSophia03
    @FlywithSophia03 Рік тому +30

    Love the cooperation with Jack

  • @umalbaneen6400
    @umalbaneen6400 11 днів тому +2

    that is very japanese of him.

  • @ayahramy
    @ayahramy 6 місяців тому +1

    What a great vid!

  • @sweetviolents29
    @sweetviolents29 3 місяці тому +4

    Is it okay for queer men to tell straight men how they ought to think about women?

  • @StarsTogether
    @StarsTogether 7 місяців тому +4

    This is fantastic content. I've read a book on this topic and it was influential. "Stars Aligned" by Olivia Whitestone

    • @birladevi77
      @birladevi77 7 місяців тому

      A bit summary of it?!

  • @lucid685
    @lucid685 4 місяці тому +6

    Hes a genius. The way he potrays characters is part of what makes him great.

  • @eliskavitu5462
    @eliskavitu5462 Рік тому +50

    Wow these were some great questions! I really enjoyed your conversation

  • @Vonography
    @Vonography 10 місяців тому +12

    I’ve only read one book, from this Author titled “Men Without Women” maybe it went over my head. But after reading his book I felt his views were more on the contrary. As if the stories followed men who could “not” live without women. This book I’m speaking of in particular seemed to paint a picture, from a males perspective, on how women had this mystic beauty about them and how fickle their hearts were, how men needed women. It just seemed as if this book was more appreciative of women in general than misogynistic.

    • @farawaykin
      @farawaykin 9 місяців тому +24

      but viewing women as mystic creatures (=dehumanization) and fickle (=shallow) are basically the tenets of misogyny… and when most people say men can’t live without women, they tend to mean that women carry whole households on their ‘fragile’ lady shoulders like it’s normal and natural, not that men need them to have deep conversations with. appreciating women because they are beautiful objects, working horses, or fertile goddesses is plain misogyny

  • @Toribell1928
    @Toribell1928 4 місяці тому

    The hunger games thing is exactly how I feel like I was big into it when it was popular but the world does not appeal to me enough to jump back in. Dystopian trilogies at that time really did it for me but they were satisfying on their own, don’t need anymore

  • @whitebubble4693
    @whitebubble4693 5 місяців тому +2

    Okay. Valid point (from a female perspective). But is a man responsible for the right representation of women? I myself have difficulties finding books written by women where I find a true, in depth representation of what it is like to be a woman. Don't even get me started on the most famous female writers right now (with mainly female following) that portray women as doormats who can take any treatment as long as their 'love' interest looks good. Recently I was reading Clarice Lispector and that's when I realized how rare it is to find a woman who truly captures the depths and many angles of women (if you have other recommendations, please share). So, while calling men out for their problematic portrayal of women, also call out female authors for their lack of representation of the 'topic' they are experts in.

    • @toriwork8891
      @toriwork8891 5 місяців тому +1

      If a man is incapable of writing over 50% of the population well, that'a a major writing flaw. I would say men are absolutely responsible for being able to write a woman character that is as well written as his male characters and not as some kind of object (sexual, on a pedestal, etc). It's the bare minimum to expect men to understand that women are human too, and it's not the responsibility of women to teach men the most basic kind of empathy. Also, if the women writers you're reading is Sarah J Maas or Colleen Hoover or etc . . . then that's like going into a Marvel movie trying to understand the nuances of men. It's silly popcorn. Absolutely nothing wrong with enjoying or reading or writing that stuff, but it's not supposed to be a deep exploration of human nature. It's fun escapism. No one (or mostly no one) is looking for men to understand the "mysterious inner goddess" or whatever (honestly this idea that women are so hard to write or so mysterious is baffling to me, like just write a good character but has boobs, how hard is it?), but just to give their women characters equal treatment as the men. That they don't just exist to serve male characters and aren't wholly defined by some sexist stereotypical role. They should have their own goals, dreams, agency, and personality - they should get to be funny and gross and sexual and asexual and right and wrong and fucked up and admirable as all the male characters. Like, take Brandon Sanderson. He's praised for his women characters and critiqued for not having good characters because his characters aren't that deep, but his women get equal treatment as his men (especially as he goes along). No one is asking for the perfect character, just equal treatment. It's really the bare minimum and it's pathetic so many male writers can't even do that.

    • @whitebubble4693
      @whitebubble4693 5 місяців тому +1

      @@toriwork8891 I mean yeah, I do fully agree with you that women should be represented well. My point is though, that we should expect it from both genders. I do not read Colleen Hoover (I have listened to one book to my greatest regret) and I realized that some women can be more misogynistic than men. True, as writers they are not writing in the same genre nor are on the same league, but I do not agree that the content of her books should not weigh as heavy as Murakami's. In fact her books are mainly read by teenagers who still have to develop a perspective on relationships between men and women, whereas the readers of Murakami are mostly adults who understand context and a character's perspective.

    • @MiyukiixxZ
      @MiyukiixxZ 5 місяців тому +1

      It's not about depth. it's about respect and Murakami apparently never heard of it.

  • @PepitoMegaChocolato
    @PepitoMegaChocolato 10 місяців тому +12

    Which Murakami books are you referring to precisely?
    I have read several of the author ( A Wild Sheep Chase, The Elephant Vanishes, danse danse danse, Kafka on the Shore ), and I have never felt this misogine side which seems to be denounced here. In my comprehension the female characters most of the time embody the archetypal spirit guide for the protagonists of his stories

    • @Sage-Em
      @Sage-Em 10 місяців тому +5

      They're coming up with unnecessary criticism out of thin air basically

    • @Ryo-jb4zn
      @Ryo-jb4zn 6 місяців тому +5

      If you never noticed it you seriously need some lessons and education on critical thinking, analysis and misogyny.

    • @PepitoMegaChocolato
      @PepitoMegaChocolato Місяць тому +3

      @@Ryo-jb4zn instead of looking down on me by telling me that I need to educate myself, perhaps you could construct an argument that is not authoritative and explain by example how Murakami is a mysogynist author?

  • @taesthetic6598
    @taesthetic6598 6 місяців тому +24

    I'm sorry but I feel like this is an opinion that gets repeated infinitely because it has become popular to say that "Murakami's a mysoginist" and if you don't state that, you're automatically morally deranged. And although everyone's entitled to their own opinion, as someone who has read almost all of Murakami's production and is studying japanese literature at univetsity, I think his writing has been misjudged by young mainstream audiences.
    Even if there are some frequent doubtious comments about women's breasts etc., Murakami is well known for his basic male protaginsts who live boring lives and in those contexts the female characters are actually the most interesting ones: the women in his books are ambitious, complex and precious keys to the hidden world of his magical realism type of style. They make his books move.

    • @farahbenbrinis9963
      @farahbenbrinis9963 6 місяців тому +2

      I absolutely agree with you

    • @Ryo-jb4zn
      @Ryo-jb4zn 6 місяців тому

      Ambitious? Complex? The male character might be sort of pathetic but the women are all just sexdolls.

    • @oofym353
      @oofym353 Годину тому

      Not to mention that i think a more apt phrase than "Misogyny" is "Fantasising".
      Murakamis female character's often appear smarter/more mature than his male character's. It reminds me a bit of how Dostoevsky's female character's are often written as angelic "saviours" so to speak. Realistic? Not really. Misogynistic? I really doubt it.
      Not to mention Murakami has had a stable marriage since 1971. If he was some sort of weird sex pest in real life I'd be more inclined to listen to the claim that he's misogynistic, but that doesn't seem to be the case.

  • @Aaa-dv3oi
    @Aaa-dv3oi Місяць тому

    Tbh it’s curious for me as a woman to read this, it’s like those morbid things you like, like murder mysteries.It’s a new perspective and reading it just expands on it, its super insightful for me. And well would I respect him and all, no probably not, but knowing its his genuine pov is what makes it so curious, like watching what goes on inside a manic person’s brain

  • @RG-sv4qb
    @RG-sv4qb 5 місяців тому +2

    What the hell are you all talking about!? murakami books barely have characters, male or female, and they all exist in some liminal space. I think it's a little much to call him misogynistic just because his books arent really about characters. I just finished Wind-Up Bird and the male protagonist has almost zero going on, his whole life is focussed on getting a back woman who barely likes him. As a western, i also think we can be a little arrogant in think we can instantly pick up a translation of a japanese book and instantly understand all the cultural nuiance. We are talking aboit a country who on just raised the age of cinsent from 13 to 16... That doesnt sit right where im from (UK) but can we really condemn a whole culture for viewing things differently to us?

  • @jodiseymour8709
    @jodiseymour8709 24 дні тому +1

    A lot anime writers do this too. I wonder why.

  • @sophieelizabeth3976
    @sophieelizabeth3976 Рік тому +215

    as a woman, you guys are overreacting about this. and completely neglecting the depth at which he portrayed characters like naoko in norwegian wood. he created this depth of a character who truly resonated with me as a teenage girl, and now men and so many others are just dismissing him as having “portrayed women badly/sexually”. the sensuality in the book, for me at least, was aesthetically beautiful as well as empowering. the reductionism is this claim that he objectified women is so dissapointing & im sick of people dismissing his work because of it

    • @m.m4999
      @m.m4999 Рік тому +47

      thank you for the explanation
      it's funny how everyone finds something in everything and connects it to misogyny these days... 😢😢

    • @malu8710
      @malu8710 Рік тому +22

      I agree! When looking at a character, we want to see the world from the character’s eyes, not how the author sees it..And I agree with what you said about it being very sensual.

    • @anthonyt219
      @anthonyt219 Рік тому +31

      Well said. Fiction should be a place where an author is free to express himself but also get into the headspace of characters that are different from himself.
      People shouldnt judge an author by characters actions or way of thinking. Harukis books are not autobiographical.

    • @78cottoncandy
      @78cottoncandy Рік тому +91

      I think you are neglecting the depth of Murakami and his readers here. Reading thru some of that interview Jack mentioned that the end here, he and the interviewer have very different perspectives on his characters. He doesn't think his portrayals are sexist but his opinion isn't automatically correct because he's the writer. Our writing is always going to have our unconscious biases. He writes from his lived experience as a man in a society known for how people must conform. Some readers may dismiss all his works because of that sexism and like... what is wrong with that? There are many other authors out there with equally as meaningful characters or interesting stories that will resonate with that reader better. Other readers will be able to look past the sexism or accept it as part of his perspective and enjoy the story nonetheless. Others will not see it as sexist, like he doesn't.

    • @Handle947
      @Handle947 Рік тому +176

      Women don’t have to force themselves to appreciate the work of a sexist author. Just like black people for instance don’t have to force themselves appreciate the work of a racist author. Authors aren’t above scrutiny and criticism.

  • @jckiie
    @jckiie 2 місяці тому

    I’m glad I’m not the only one being let down with book lovers! I also didn’t feel a connection with the plot

  • @crossgame9479
    @crossgame9479 Місяць тому +1

    I just finished reading My first book from Murakami. Unfortunately it was Kafka on the Shore. I am not picking another book by him. I just can't. I gave him the benefit of doubt at first. It was just too incesty. The whole damn book right from the start. I dreaded reading the Kafka's part. I liked Nakata's quite a lot but it was only because Nakata didn't have any sexual feelings so there was minimal objectifying of women. It only happend in the later half of the book because of the character named Hoshino. I just have a lot to say about the book...........

  • @jyeprice9382
    @jyeprice9382 9 місяців тому +1

    Jack is so pretty 😂

  • @pressheart64
    @pressheart64 8 місяців тому +14

    Deeply problematic obviously but I admire the mans honesty. She gave him a scapegoat and he doubled down instead lol

  • @o_o-lj1ym
    @o_o-lj1ym 5 місяців тому +2

    Wait he said no? Wth

  • @emptylikebox
    @emptylikebox 6 місяців тому +2

    Most of the women characters in his novels are built in such a way that most men likes them to be. Sorry, but that's how I see it. I don't see it as problematic-and wouldn't jump to that political correctness bandwagon, which is rather pathetic-but I think some men find it hard to swallow that they tend to objectify women. Men likes to think of women as mystical creatures creatures, they like the thrill of the chase, or the idea that a woman is an "idea" or a puzzle that needs to be solved. But at the same time, they don't like rejection so they settled with women who is available or can be easily reached.

  • @Hawkeyed943
    @Hawkeyed943 5 місяців тому

    If anyone can recommend some UA-camrs that recommend mysteries/thrillers (etc), I would greatly appreciate it 😊

  • @danzz4
    @danzz4 5 місяців тому

    Oh no I really wanted to read Norwegian wood but this is making me doubt it 😭 Should I still go for it?

  • @MsLoila
    @MsLoila 3 місяці тому

    All people think like that.

  • @mahimshahriar7346
    @mahimshahriar7346 5 місяців тому +4

    As someone who has read more Murakami than any other author this is truly hilarious, makes me wonder if we read the same books.

  • @redsol3629
    @redsol3629 3 місяці тому +1

    Hes the creator and we are the audience. If you don't like it, leave.

    • @kathleen9774
      @kathleen9774 3 місяці тому

      You sound painfully dumb

    • @lsdvd4206
      @lsdvd4206 2 місяці тому

      @@kathleen9774 silence, hole

  • @bsixtwelve9799
    @bsixtwelve9799 3 місяці тому

    John Banville, on the other hand, has received acclaim for how we writes women. Then he opens his mouth in interviews and makes you wish you had a Time Machine* for before he said problematic garbage that taints his work in your memory. Often even good writing isn’t enough. So many messy writers.
    *I know Time Machine isn’t capitalized in this context, but my iPhone didn’t get the memo.

  • @rinie572
    @rinie572 3 місяці тому

    nobody:
    authors in the back of their books:

  • @PENH5428
    @PENH5428 Місяць тому

    I think accepting that men objectify women as truth will help women be much more cautious.
    I say this as a woman who was once young, trusting, and extremely naive - I had no clue that I was surrounded by sharks .

  • @Su-mx7ix
    @Su-mx7ix 5 місяців тому

    OK sorry for the excessive number of poems I’m too lazy to copy into a single one, but I really wanted to say how important your remark on working with metre first, before venturing into free verse, is: the same goes for art. All the great painters that broke from the Academy and have been the unfair target of poorly educated artistic scrutiny could and did draw to the Academic standards. They weren’t “painting like 5 year olds,” they had already excelled at structure before they intentionally and ideologically broke from it. And this also reminds me of Gordon Ramsay who, when someone on Hell’s Kitchen made a “deconstructed dish” to show him, was furious anyone would do deconstruction before they could prepare the actual dish to perfection. Paraphrasing, he said “Be able to make the constructed dish before deconstructing it.” I think that advice works across every imaginable field, not just the arts-in-the-general-sense. I can’t imagine anything it wouldn’t apply to. All this rambling to say: great and valuable advice! I’ve loved both of your poetry videos, I’ll check the others on another night. Keeping my fingers crossed you’ll upload more on literature!

  • @shethewriter
    @shethewriter 2 місяці тому

    When you read just one or two of his books it feels intentional but then when you read more it just gets gross

  • @truepunkushka
    @truepunkushka 8 днів тому

    when will people understand that the author’s opinion and his writings should be separated? why couldn’t Murakamu’s novels have acquired meaning that wasn’t intended by the writer or even contrary to his views?

  • @genevarockeman9721
    @genevarockeman9721 Місяць тому

    Terry Pratchett is still the best I've seen of male authors writing women. They're different ages, sizes, have a wide variety of goals and desires, have real relationships and make real mistakes. 11/10, still my favorite.

  • @solola5632
    @solola5632 10 місяців тому +32

    Murakami is literally million years old man raised and lived his whole life in an asian (patriarchal) country with deep and complex hierarchy system. What would you expect?

    • @YatashaPenguin
      @YatashaPenguin 10 місяців тому +4

      That’s sooo true.

    • @Ryo-jb4zn
      @Ryo-jb4zn 6 місяців тому +1

      A critical and rational view of the world instead of a world view that was forced down his throat and he just accepted it? Perhaps because he enjoys and agrees with it tbh

    • @ohnoitsthenoooo
      @ohnoitsthenoooo 5 місяців тому +3

      An adult level of critical thinking that leads to him realising that the other half of the human population also deserves respect?

  • @inveteratecrusader4882
    @inveteratecrusader4882 5 місяців тому

    Tbf, even if it was intentional he might've just pulled a g move and said it wasn't intentional to spite the interviewer.

  • @juliettebotticelli8933
    @juliettebotticelli8933 3 місяці тому

    Well, I really agree that his portrayals of women are quite bad. But at the same time we are talking about a man in his 70's coming from a society (the Japanese society) which is still today very much based on strong patriarchal values (at least more than many western countries). Yes, Japan in recent years has evolved a lot regarding gender equality, and no, I'm not trying to totally justify him, but that is a fact. So instead of trying to pretend of him to change what he writes (which is highly improbable) we as readers we should recognise and support other female authors, like the already mentioned Mieko Kawakami: she is a great author, as Murakami himself also said, but obviously she has a different perspective on womanhood and society. I personally, as a young cis woman, really resonated with what she has written. Same goes with the great work of Banana Yoshimoto. I highly recommend both! (Of course I also like Murakami, simply women's point of view is not his thing)

  • @creativesparks2164
    @creativesparks2164 2 місяці тому

    Yeah mostly If an author is spreading a view it’s cause they think like that.
    Unless they portray the opposite on purpose but then address it

  • @eastindian1095
    @eastindian1095 18 годин тому

    I found his book quite vulgar. The portray of women is horrible. But man he does write a great piece on solitude,aloofness and great happiness of living alone in the hills. From all the books i read of him i loved Killing commendatore and what i talk about when i talk about running. I hated kafka on the shore, but that book’s story is in my brain still.

  • @eikyoutube
    @eikyoutube 2 місяці тому +2

    Woke culture ffs

  • @ohnoitsthenoooo
    @ohnoitsthenoooo 5 місяців тому +10

    Honestly im so tired of people making excuses for this guy. If you can't write women then you aren't a good writer. I dont care how ~aesthetic~ his books look in your instagram pictures, he's a one trick pony.

    • @rwt2320
      @rwt2320 4 місяці тому +1

      Most other things he's exceptional at though

    • @Hello-hello-hello456
      @Hello-hello-hello456 2 місяці тому

      This take, I totally agree with. If you can only write one type of character, story and theme over and over, and not even depict an entire gender without objectifying them, then you aren't a very good author. You might have some good qualities, but you're a one-trick pony.

  • @neerajnongmaithem392
    @neerajnongmaithem392 Місяць тому

    At the end of the day, its fiction, people have the right to write what they write and people have the right to read what they read. I got no problems with what murakami writes, it's give me a deeper insight of the writer's mind, makes me travel back to the mind of Japanese man back in the 60s, I cant blame him, as we are what we are surrounded with, his views and thinking was shaped by the environment he grew up in. I don't relate to him as I didn't lived the life he did. Judging people from a past generation by the perspective of a modern lens has always been an interesting proposition to me.

    • @andrewdrewandy
      @andrewdrewandy Місяць тому

      books like Lolita make me question this mindset. you can say it’s just fiction, that it’s just psychological horror, but it’s still incredibly creepy. same goes for things like misogyny. just odd

  • @abantimukherjee9745
    @abantimukherjee9745 Місяць тому

    i think what murakami tries to do is make it more disturbing with his disturbing portrayal of women, like intentionally. But it would have been great if in some of his novels he took a different aproach.

  • @satvikapanyam9923
    @satvikapanyam9923 4 місяці тому

    I'm confused, what does the no mean? that he actually thinks about women the way he portrays them in his books?? or no its for the plot?

  • @gggen7242
    @gggen7242 Рік тому +33

    Can somebody explain what is problematic of his portrayal of woman ?
    I read his books but I don’t get it

    • @stellarae8257
      @stellarae8257 Рік тому +9

      Let me read some of his books and I’ll get back to you lmao but you can probably find articles about it if you want

    • @gggen7242
      @gggen7242 Рік тому +14

      @@stellarae8257 thanks! I’m Japanese and I don’t see a lot of Japanese articles about it so I really appreciate it if you come back

    • @phuongnguyenha8903
      @phuongnguyenha8903 Рік тому +80

      I think its about how some of the female characters in his books were overlly sexualized. Like how they was described in a very sensual way. I liked Norwegian Wood but I remembered that I was so uncomfortable reading those passage where the main lead Toru think about Midori. And it kinda got worse when I read Kafka on the shore so since then I just stop reading his books.

    • @gggen7242
      @gggen7242 Рік тому +4

      @@phuongnguyenha8903 do you mean you didn’t like sexual scenes in his books?

    • @veenitareadswrites
      @veenitareadswrites Рік тому +67

      Okay, so. I have read or rather reading only one book. South of the Border, West of the Sun. And the way the protagonist talks about being with women is really problematic. This is my point of view.
      The protag had a friend (who was a girl) at childhood whom he sort of fantasizes about continuously.
      He got a girlfriend whom he slowly coerced to make her let him touch her sexually. See, the girl wasn't willing at first nor was comfortable much, as far as I could get from the prose. But he did and then swiftly moved to have sex with her cousin while he was dating her. When she got to know she was deeply saddened and shocked but his only excuse was it was supposed to happen like this and he was sorry.
      Then he gets married, the wife gets pregnant, and at that time he goes around sleeping with other girls. Idk about Japanese society. But from a woman's pov it's really really disturbing to see a man who says he cares for the women in his lives but actions say otherwise.

  • @witheringsamadi8430
    @witheringsamadi8430 10 місяців тому +7

    But the liberation of *fiction* shouldn't be restricted, no? I am a woman myself and i live my whole almost 30 years of life in south east asia has no problem at all reading all of his works. I'm not offended with what he said in his *novel*. People should have the freedom to decide for themselves to support his books. Remember that people's preference is very diverse. Afterall book should be enjoyable. I think it's not your place to judge the right and wrong way of thinking when people reading his book

    • @thunderstorms6886
      @thunderstorms6886 10 місяців тому +11

      I personally see the author not as "wrong" but as less insightful and narrow-minded. Immediately reduces their value.

    • @shane1948
      @shane1948 9 місяців тому +4

      I'm southeast asian too and I agree with you 100%. People cancelling everything is the reason why everything is so bland today. Movies books etc... art is meant to be unrestricted. They should write their own book but of course it's just easier to destroy someone else's

    • @nt_202
      @nt_202 9 місяців тому +7

      We are also free to criticize any art.

    • @Mary-xb3ew
      @Mary-xb3ew 7 місяців тому +1

      He can have an opinion just like u

  • @prakrutipatil6469
    @prakrutipatil6469 Рік тому +2

    is this his new podcast or something?

  • @ssssundae
    @ssssundae 6 місяців тому +1

    I had to stop reading his books bc of the way he writes abotu women. there are multiple books where these older loser type main characters have sex with the much younger woman, completely randomly and wihtout meaning to the plot. along with the many things he's said about women in his writing, it just feels icky.

  • @RougeDeBlah
    @RougeDeBlah 6 місяців тому +4

    So much cope in these comments, murakami is so based and red pilled

  • @CriticallyMe
    @CriticallyMe 7 місяців тому +1

    Oh my good gracious, it's fiction. Romance novels. We talking about the portrayal of men?

  • @ametistazz
    @ametistazz День тому

    A writer that can't write complex female characters is not a good writer, i said what i sad

  • @saaniyaphatak1123
    @saaniyaphatak1123 7 місяців тому

    as someone who is reading men without women i would definitely agree that this book is definitely sexist in so many ways

  • @aporajitabangali3827
    @aporajitabangali3827 6 місяців тому

    Any recommendations of Murakami which doesn’t this misogynistic views? Because i read kafka on the shore and really like it, but had to skip every time a woman was in the scene because his portrayal of them makes me nauseous.

  • @jejo63660
    @jejo63660 Рік тому +15

    (I feel like I should preface this by saying I’m a guy) I love the idea of murikami’s style, a dreamlike, ethereal attitude to writing where you’re allowed to have loose connections, unconscious symbolism and nonsensical experiences, but after having read a couple of Murikami’s books, to me he is shielded a bit from actual criticism because of that style/attitude. Like if I finish Kafka on the Shore and think, “Well I get that there’s an Oedipus complex going on but don’t really get anything else that the book is trying to do,” the common response from pro-Murikami people is, “it’s not *supposed* to make sense. You should explore what it means to encounter something that doesn’t make sense consciously.” And while that could be true sometimes, it can also be a cop-out to actual criticism. To be perfectly honest, “It’s not supposed to make sense” is an unacceptable defense to criticism 99.9% of the time it’s said about anything.

    • @ahnmensch3115
      @ahnmensch3115 Рік тому +8

      Saying that it doesn't make sense is not really a defense, but more of an explanation. The same way that one could say a book has "bland or stereotypical characters" but in actuality, the author wrote them purposefully bland and stereotypical for "this and that reason".
      Doesn't automatically make the reader enjoy it more, bland is still bland, nonsensical is still nonsensical, but one should at least still consider the writer's intent behind that choice to possibly find more that'll help you enjoy it.

  • @justinmitchell3246
    @justinmitchell3246 5 місяців тому

    Jack should probably remove the Nietzsche quote from his goodreads then

  • @kikibyde
    @kikibyde 2 місяці тому

    Don't characters always mirror the writers

  • @Teashoe
    @Teashoe Рік тому +43

    Two men discussing women letssgooo

    • @filmaddict143
      @filmaddict143 Рік тому +2

      lmfaooo😭😭

    • @Fi0laa159
      @Fi0laa159 Рік тому +87

      This comment takes it out of context, its two men speaking about how misogynistic another man is

    • @chillySw33t
      @chillySw33t Рік тому +46

      I don't know who the interviewer is but I've been following Jack Edwards on his social media for 3-4 years and he's very articulate when it comes to supporting women's rights and he's not a "podcast bro" talking about women in derogatory terms. He's the only male booktuber I like, I usually gravitate towards following/watching female youtubers so the fact that he's the exception speaks volumes.

    • @ReVeluv.OT5
      @ReVeluv.OT5 Рік тому +20

      ​@@chillySw33tAnd he knows his stuff just because he's a man doesn't mean he has absolutely no idea abt this

    • @OmmerSyssel
      @OmmerSyssel 10 місяців тому

      RACIST clown! 😱🤣

  • @NeonPixels81
    @NeonPixels81 6 місяців тому

    I read all the way through 1Q84 and it was a slog, mostly due to how one-dimensional the female characters were. I thought at the end we'd find out that they were "written" that way because Tengo was writing the world into existence and he was kindof a sex-crazed misogynist, but nope. Nothing so subtle. So I gave Murakami another chance and started Wind-Up Bird Chronicles...within 20 pages I had to close the book because he's already sexualizing the ears (literally) of a 15 year old. I'm all for edgy, boundary pushing texts, but if that same text is also purposeless, narrativeless, and has no ultimate message, I have no interest in it.

  • @karimshawagfeh3630
    @karimshawagfeh3630 8 місяців тому

    😭😭😭😭💀💀

  • @handshakes76
    @handshakes76 4 місяці тому

    his writing in general is terrible. "i walked into the room. the room was blue. the blue was the color of the sky."

    • @cokesucker9520
      @cokesucker9520 2 місяці тому +2

      Sounds like a translation issue.

  • @fun-with-purpose1436
    @fun-with-purpose1436 2 місяці тому +1

    Problematic? He’s writing from his perspective and he’s a storyteller. Of all the things to criticize by “modern moral standards” as if feminist writers don’t objectify men or are “problematic” in their world view. This complainer makes me cringe. “Problematic” is such a buzz word especially of virtue signaling youth. Just don’t read murakamis books. Not to mention these guys both sound gay. And gay men objectify and judge other men constantly.

  • @davidhandel5894
    @davidhandel5894 4 місяці тому

    what would bukwoski say about this.

  • @LudvigIndestrucable
    @LudvigIndestrucable 25 днів тому

    I'm sorry, but you completely misrepresented Murakami and that interview. It was not a question about a teenage student boy, it was how a woman saw herself. She had prefaced this with how compelling and accurate his female characters are in other works.

  • @tantaroy386
    @tantaroy386 2 місяці тому

    His books are plain depressing

  • @unzin-rb6pm
    @unzin-rb6pm 3 місяці тому +2

    he sounds like my kinda writer. beta males calling his perspective on women 'problematic' is exactly the antidote to this third wave feminazi wokeism that I'd like to read.

  • @mdoglegend
    @mdoglegend 10 місяців тому +6

    Japanese man born in 1949 isn’t woke to all the issues

  • @rcarrascc
    @rcarrascc 4 місяці тому +1

    Who are these punks and why are they on my feed? 😅