村上春树短篇集(渡边搜集整理)
Princeton - Introduction -
It was in the summer of 1984 that I visited Princeton, New Jersey
for the first time.
I took an Amtrak train from Washington D.C. and on my way to New
York, I got off the train at Princeton Junction and took a taxi and
went to the university. 1984 was the presidential election year
between Reagan and Mondale. Everywhere I heard "Born in the USA" by
Bruce Springsteen, and Michael Jackson was wearing the silver glove
due to getting burned on the hand. (That sounds like just a few
years ago. Maybe because I'm getting older)
The reason I came to Princeton was simple; Princeton University was
the school F. Scott Fitzgerald graduated from and I wanted to see
its campus myself. I had no special purpose for my visiting except
that. My train stopped at Princeton and probably, I thought, I would
have no business coming here again in my future, which made me to
decide to drop in the university. After rambling on campus, looking
at his own hand written manuscript in a special room at the library,
walking around the town, and staying one night at a shabby motel
"Princeton Motor Lodge," I jumped on the Amtrak again and went to
New York. I still remember that the town gave me a peaceful and
pastoral impression. It was during the summer vacation and few
people were seen on spacious campus and the town looked drowsy. When
jogging in the morning, I stumbled upon many rabbits and squirrels
around the area. (The next time I visited, the fields were replaced
by a big shopping mall.)
Another thing I clearly remember was the taxi I took at Princeton
Junction. Nowadays lots of taxis are waiting in front of the railway
station, but when I arrived there, there happened to be no taxi. The
shuttle train between the station and the university was out of
service then, I forgot the reason, though. The Princeton Junction
station is located all alone in vacant fields, and you could find no
house where people are living. The passengers who got off at the
station were only four; a woman in her mid-twenties, a black man
around twenty, me and my companion. All we could do was sit in front
of the station and wait for a taxi.
It was quite a long time before a taxi came up. We had started to
worry about ourselves when, eventually, one taxi appeared. Feeling
relieved, all four of us pooled the one taxi. The woman took a seat
beside the driver and the rest of us occupied the back seat. The
taxi-driver was a middle-aged big white guy. The taxi started with
our sense of relief, but after a while the black man next to me
deliberately took his hair spray can out of a suitcase, and after
shaking it up and down, started to spray on his hair. I could not
understand why he did such a thing in a taxi-cab, but anyway the
rest of us could hardly bear it. He kept on spraying and finally the
driver pulled the car to the curb, got out, opened the back door and
shouted furiously to the black man saying "You get out here!" At
first, he grumbled and resisted, but maybe intimidated by the
tough-guy-appearance of the driver, he got out with his suitcase,
showing no further protest. He must have been stoned on drugs. The
driver returned to his seat and continued to drive, and carried
three of us to town, as if nothing had happened.
A little later, the driver said to us as if to spit out that "We had
no one like that here before." "After inviting the business complex
in the suburbs of town, ever more narcotics began to flow into this
area. What on earth will become of this town in the next several
years?
Seven years later, I revisited Princeton. This time I was going to
stay at the university for a long period. When chatting with an
American in Japan, I said something to the effect that "I'd like to
get relaxed and write novels in a quiet place without any
disturbance." Then he promptly met a person related to Princeton
University and made an actual plan for going abroad. He said to me
"Now Princeton University is inviting you. Your residential place
has already been reserved. Pack everything up and go there by the
end of next January." I like this kind of American alacrity.
It was the fall of 1990 when we started packing and preparing for
our stay in the U.S. Though at that time we had just finished a
three-year stay in Europe and come back to Japan, we were starting
again to stay abroad without exactly noticing why. I felt it was a
bit hectic, but I didn't want to lose the good chance to live in
Princeton anyway.
The Gulf War broke out when I was on the way to the American
Consulate. In a taxi heading for Akasaka, we heard the news on the
radio tell us that the American forces attacked Baghdad with
missiles. It was not a good sign for us. We couldn't feel at ease to
live in America when it was at war with a country, even if the
country was very far away. But all the paperwork had been finished,
and we had no choice but to go to the U.S. As a result, we had no
war-influence on our stay, but we didn't feel comfortable in the
patriotic and macho mood of the society. Once I saw a student
demonstration on the campus of Princeton with a placard that read
"The Gulf War is something...." I remembered "the good old anti-war
protest," but when I watched more carefully, I found it was a
"pro-war" demonstration. I have no intention to interfere in
somebody else's affairs, but I took the fact to heart that the times
have really changed. Later when I talked with a student at Rutgers
University(it is a more average university though), the student said
"It is because of Princeton, Mr. Murakami. We had an anti-war
protest all right." Later in Princeton we had violent trouble when
pro-war students attacked anti-war students and snatched their
placards and broke them.
But anyway that war came to a successful end, and when we started
feeling at ease, the next turbulence occurred; the rise of Japan
bashing throughout the country before the approaching 50-year
anniversary of Pearl Harbor. This atmosphere was generated partly by
the patriotism uplifted following the Gulf War, and partly because
Americans were searching for an outlet for their frustration toward
the lasting dull economy in the country. I don't know how it was
reported in Japan, but I felt it rather tough to live actually in
that kind of social ambiance. Besides a sense of uncomfortableness,
the air surrounding me often had something like a thorn pricking me.
Especially when December came, I rarely went out except shopping and
often stayed at home. It was not only the case with me, but all the
Japanese here felt something similar. In such a delicate time, a
certain Japanese politician (you know who he is) made some remarks
which rubbed Americans the wrong way, which really made me wonder
what on earth the Japanese politician was thinking and made me so
furious.
In one of those days, I was invited to dinner by an American
acquaintance of mine, and at the dinner table, a white American (he
was a retired professor though) let it slip and called me "You
Jap...." in the conversation. That made all the people present
deadly silent as if all of them had cold water poured on their head,
.and the host turned ghastly pale. This was the worst thing that
could ever happen at an American dinner table. The person in
question didn't seem to notice that he let these words out at all.
Later the host called me aside and made an excuse by saying that
"Haruki, he has no malicious intention, so please forgive him. When
young, he was recruited by the navy and fought against Japan in the
Pacific Ocean. The military education he received still remains with
him. We never have any private antipathy to you all." I replied that
"I got it, so please don't worry." Actually I didn't care about it,
but still now I remember how strained the people present were. This
was a rare experience.
With these kind of incidents, my first year was rather tense to me.
It was rather a heavy year for Americans and for us as well. Soon
after this, the riot hit Los Angeles. Throughout the year, I shut
myself up indoors and I was writing a long novel. I seldom went
anywhere and didn't do almost anything else. After undergoing
mysterious twists and turns, this long novel split into two cells;
one became a rather long short novel (or a rather short long novel)
"Kokkyou no minami, Taiyo no nishi" and the other a rather long long
novel "Nejimakidori Chronicle."
Following this intensive year and a short break, my wish to write
something like an essay gradually became stronger. Successfully I
came to publish a series of my essays every month in a little
magazine "Book" from Kodansha. The length of each essay was
twenty-one or two pages of 400-character manuscript paper, and this
was the longest essay I had ever published. But while writing a
series of essays for one and half years,
I never felt each essay was too long. As is often the case with
writers, I am rather a type of writer who thinks while writing
words. Materializing my thought into words and rethinking about it
in a visual way, it often helps me a lot. In that sense, writing as
many as twenty-one or two pages every month gave me a wider range of
thinking. Probably during the past one-year stay in America, various
things, I think, have been piled up which must be interpreted into
words along with a careful consideration.
Consequently the taxi driver's anxiety in 1984, implied in his
whisper "What will become of this community in the next several
years?", might be partly right and partly not. In the point that
Princeton is still a peaceful and beautiful town beyond worldly
affairs, his apprehensions ended up as needless fears. In spite of
the increase of shopping malls, the ready-built houses for sale ,
and the occasional traffic jams in the morning and evening rush
hours, the basic characteristic of the town has scarcely changed.
But his anxiety has been realized in that the U.S., including this
small community, has undergone some changes. Looking carefully at
this country from inside, I feel keenly that it is a serious task to
keep winning the wars one after another. Despite the collapse in the
Vietnam War, this country won the Cold War and the Gulf War, but
this doesn't necessarily mean that the citizens of this country
became happier than ever before. People seem to be even more at a
loss in the predicament of serious problems than ten years ago. Both
nation and its people, I think, need to meet with some setbacks or
defeats in their turning point. But if asked whether the U.S. can be
replaced by some other countries providing as definite and powerful
sense of value as this country does, my answer is negative. In this
sense, a sense of exhaustion that the Americans are feeling in
general resembles some itching uncomfortableness in which the
present Japanese are placed. In brief, this can be explained as
follows; the exhaustion of America caused by the distinct idea about
what they should do or where they should go, and the
uncomfortableness of Japan without any clear-cut belief that we are
headed in the right direction. When facing these two choices between
distinctiveness and ambiguity, the Japanese might feel what a heavy
burden it is to choose their way to lead in future..
Writing essays for this book gave me the opportunity to think over
various matters. But no conclusive answer is given in almost any
facet where some crucial value judgment is needed. Therefore,
regrettably, this book doesn't help you get "the instant
understanding of America." As an author, I am gratified if this book
will be "a hint" to your understanding of the States.
December, 1993
In Boston