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Sunday, 14 September 2025

The Odyssey and The Tale of Genji: on human nature, customs, and literary tradition

In an earlier blog post, I wrote “I actually had more trouble trying to understand the characters in The Tale of Genji (about 1,000 years old) than the ones in the Odyssey (about 2,700 years old).” My friend Susan asked why that was, so perhaps I’ll write a bit about the subject.

The Odyssey is—if we have to boil it down to one word—about homecoming. The only thing strange about is the concept of xenia—hospitality and guest-friendship—because why does Odysseus’s household have to keep feeding the suitors and allowing them to eat up the estate in his absence? Athena’s involvement is perhaps also a bit strange, but not that strange if you think of her as a character—the gods are like human beings, just with power—and if you’re used to the depiction of the gods’ interferences in Greek tragedy. Everything else is familiar: Odysseus’s urge to go home and his companions’ unthinking recklessness and Poseidon’s anger and Telemakhos’s hatred of the suitors and Odysseus’s caution upon his return and Penelope’s suffering and so on are all familiar.

The Tale of Genji is closer to us in time, but more alien. It requires us to adjust to that world, but many things remain baffling and incomprehensible, if not downright reprehensible: on the one hand, men and women at the Heian court who aren’t married to each other can’t even have a conversation except through servants, and upon further acquaintance, behind screens; but on the other hand, someone like Genji has sex with everyone and nothing seems out of bounds, as he has sex with (or even forces himself on) his first cousin and his best friend’s lover and his own stepmother and other relatives, and he even abducts an eight-year-old and raises her to be his perfect wife.  

Not only so, the characters don’t have names! As the narrator is a lady-in-waiting, like Murasaki Shikibu, she has to refer to them by titles or nicknames or some other ways—we have to keep track of hundreds of characters without names (unless you take the easy way and read another translation instead of Royall Tyler’s). 

That doesn’t mean that The Tale of Genji can’t be appreciated, or even loved, by readers used to Western culture and tradition. It is among my Top 10 novels (or at least was, when I last made the list over a year ago). Once you (manage to) get past the weird stuff in The Tale of Genji, many experiences and feelings are—to use a word lots of readers seem to like—relatable: love and jealousy and heartbreak and suffocation and disappointment and envy and loneliness and fear and grief, etc. Murasaki is especially good at writing about death, grief, women’s suffering, and the impermanence of everything. Her novel simply requires more efforts from the reader. 

But it’s not just that 11th century novel, I also had a hard time when I was exploring 20th century Japanese novels. It’s a different tradition, with different styles and expectations. The only Japanese writer I wholeheartedly embrace is Akutagawa (at least the 18 short stories I’ve read). With all others, there are barriers and the novels often seem blurry to me, as someone interested in characters, details, and metaphors: the characters often seem blurry, without the vividness and complexity of characters in Western novels (except for the main characters in Kokoro and Botchan); descriptions tend to be impressionistic; metaphors are generally rare (Mishima and Abe Kobo excepted); but above all, I’m baffled by the (lack of) sense of pacing and tension, either because it has an odd structure and ends so abruptly (such as Kokoro), or because of its evenness of tone and lack of emphasis (like some novels of Kawabata and Tanizaki). I love Japanese cinema, which I know the best after American and British cinema, but Japanese literature remains for me a challenge. 

I wouldn’t be surprised if it turns out I have more difficulty with Japanese plays than with the ancient Greek plays.

It is perhaps for the same reasons—different tradition, different styles and expectations—that I took quite a while to get into Hong lou meng (Dream of the Red Chamber) from 18th century China, even though I’m familiar with Chinese culture, whereas I took to the 17th century Don Quixote immediately. Descriptions in Don Quixote may be crude—to use Nabokov’s word—but descriptions in Hong lou meng are all catalogues, awkwardly listing qualities or different aspects of someone or something like items. More importantly, Cao Xueqin often doesn’t go very far in depicting characters’ thoughts: sometimes he writes down some thoughts and one expects him to go further, but he doesn’t. Reading Hong lou meng, I had to make an effort and readjust my expectations. 

Where am I going with all this? My point is that it’s important to think of works of literature as part of a tradition. This is why I didn’t randomly pick up a single play from ancient Greece and stop, I read Aeschylus and Sophocles and Euripides and Aristophanes. This is why, with my interest in Western literature, I’m now going back to its foundation. This is why I advocate for teaching Shakespeare and the Western canon in school. This is why, when I explore literature outside the West (especially before the 20th century), I keep in mind that it’s a different tradition and try to explore multiple works and multiple writers. 

All that said, isn’t it amazing that the Odyssey is so relatable—to use again a word I don’t particularly like—after something like 2,700 years? 


PS: I recently read Cyclops by Euripides but didn’t blog about it, as I had nothing to say. 

5 comments:

  1. We do need a feel, at least, for the cultural background of a work before we can appreciate it properly. The barriers are not merely of language. I found myself lost, for instance, with The Tale of Genji, and I don’t think it was the translation that was to blame. I need, I think, to immerse myself for a while in Japanese culture before I make another attempt on that book.

    Ancient Greek culture (and also Biblical culture) I find more easily accessed, since, after all, these two are effectively the twin pillars upon which subsequent western culture - the culture with which I’m most familiar - is built.

    So much to get to know…

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    1. Yeah, that's why I was spending a few weeks reading about The Tale of Genji before picking it up.

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  2. Hello, this is John,
    I half promised to make more comment so I am writing this

    Yes! That is quite strange isn't it? That The Odyssey is much more relatable than the Tale of Genji? I once read a reviewer said that the reason being that the odyssey is basically a movie sequel to the Iliad (He compared it to tarantino’s kill bill vol 2, a movie that I don't know with a premise that baffle me- why would someone want to kill a man name bill?), but it is true! There are many parts in the Iliad I feel are boring*, it is obvious that Homer recited them to a crowd of people and (I suspect) saw many bored by sections of the first one, therefore he made the sequel (The Odyssey Supposedly made after the Iliad) more exciting, more relatable! Every section ends make you want to stay and hear the rest of the poem!

    With Shikibu it is different, she wrote novels, she couldn't see her reader/audience's reaction, she is holed up in her room writing imaginary characters in a world that is her own but slightly different and (sometimes) about places she may never have gone too!

    Shikibu, (Again my suspicion) wrote for herself (As with every author!) But she herself was a rich courtesan woman, she lived high in her castle! Most of the characters in Genji are high status officers, she wrote for a very specific part of society, Homer did not! He recited his verse in his head and spoke to whomever was there! He could get an instant reaction! They didn't like that...Yes, yes, maybe I should add something exciting here. or here?

    All western literature came from a man trying to entertain people. For better or worse, I think that is very beautiful.
    (Image semi related https://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:The_Apotheosis_of_Homer_by_Ingres#/media/File%3AHomère_déifié%2C_dit_aussi_L'apothéose_d'Homère_-_Jean-Auguste_Dominique_Ingres_-_Musée_du_Louvre_Peintures_INV_5417_%3B_C_196.jpg )

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    1. Addendum : But of course, It could all be wrong since we don’t even know if both work were written by Homer or if they were created at the same time, so it is all speculation on my part >_<

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    2. John,
      I don't think it's that. I've read somewhere that The Tale of Genji was read out loud among people at court, though I can't remember if it's Murasaki or someone else who did the reading.

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