Accepting Fate and Inevitable Death in Banana Yoshimoto’s Kitchen and “Moonlight Shadow

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It is inevitable that death is all around us. By understanding this, one has the ultimate choice to continue on with their lives or remain in a state of bereavement. An inability to escape this grieving state inhibits one to move on and consequently these feelings dictate and govern our whole lives. This philosophy, existentialism, advocates that as humans we have the power to direct our own lives and pave our own paths. Author Banana Yoshimoto recognizes this ideal and illustrates the journey of how several young adults finally realize their place and meaning in the world despite their struggles. They all face a similar tragedy where their loved ones perished from their lives, and are ultimately challenged to overcome their desolation. Although they are certainly similar in this sense, Yoshimoto portrays how each character deals with their grief in their own ways. Even through times of tragedy, characters Mikage, Satsuki and Hiiragi learn how accepting the responsibilities of death opens up new doors for their lives in Banana Yoshimoto’s Kitchen and “Moonlight Shadow.”
When Mikage Sakurai loses all of her family at such a young age, she had no one to turn to or rely on. The only way she was able to fill this void in her heart was being in the kitchen, as Mikage whimsically describes, “The place I like best in the world is the kitchen. No matter where it is, no matter what kind, if it’s a kitchen, if it’s a place where they make food, it’s fine with me...Strangely, it’s better if this kind of kitchen is large. I lean up against the silver door of a towering, giant refrigerator stocked with enough food to get through a winter. When I raise my oil-spattered gas burner and the rusty kitchen knife, outside the window stars ...

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...ect, as Satsuki observes, “Across the river, if this wasn’t a dream, and I wasn’t crazy, the figure facing me was Hitoshi...my tears fell like rain; all I could do was stare at him. Hitoshi looked sadly back at me. I wished time could stop--but with first rays of the rising sun everything slowly began to fade away. Before my eyes, Hitoshi grew faint. When I began to panic, he smiled and waved his hand. Again and again, he waves his hand. He was disappearing into the blue void. I, too, waved” (146). Satsuki was able to see Hitoshi for the last time, and was able to reach closure. Essentially, Urara was the catalyst for change as Satsuki reached a turning point where she finally accepts the responsibility and removes herself from the unshakeable feeling of death. This enabled her to illuminate the next path of her life by embracing that death and change is ineluctable.

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