I Am a Cat

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I Am a Cat (Japanese: ???????, Hepburn: Wagahai wa Neko de Aru) is a satirical novel written in 1905-1906 by Natsume S?seki, about Japanese society during the Meiji period (1868-1912); particularly, the uneasy mix of Western culture and Japanese traditions, and the aping of Western customs.

S?seki's original title, Wagahai wa Neko de Aru, uses very high-register phrasing more appropriate to a nobleman, conveying a grandiloquence and self-importance intended to sound ironic, since the speaker, an anthropomorphised domestic cat, is a house cat, not feral.

The book was first published in ten installments in the literary journal Hototogisu. At first, S?seki intended only to write the short story that constitutes the first chapter of I Am a Cat. However, Takahama Kyoshi, one of the editors of Hototogisu, persuaded S?seki to serialize the work, which evolved stylistically as the installments progressed. Nearly all the chapters can stand alone as discrete works.

In the mid-1970s, the prolific screenwriter Toshio Yasumi adapted S?seki's novel into a screenplay. Kon Ichikawa directed the film, which premiered in Japanese cinemas in 1975. The novel was also adapted into a film released in 1936, and an anime television special aired in 1982.


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Plot summary

In I Am a Cat, a supercilious, feline narrator describes the lives of an assortment of middle-class Japanese people: Mr. Sneaze ("sneeze" is misspelled on purpose, but literally translated from Chinno Kushami (?????), in the original Japanese) and family (the cat's owners), Sneaze's garrulous and irritating friend Waverhouse (??, Meitei), and the young scholar Avalon Coldmoon (????, Mizushima Kangetsu) with his will-he-won't-he courtship of the businessman's spoiled daughter, Opula Goldfield (????, Kaneda Tomiko).


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Footnotes

Source of the article : Wikipedia



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