Analysis Of Aghwee The Sky Monster

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In times of extreme traumatic stress, most often in found in those in war-stricken areas, people can develop a form of mental illness known as post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD. Those who have PTSD develop symptoms such as loss of one’s identity, distorted feelings of blame, obsession over the event, avoiding public places and people, and flashbacks (NIMH). In Ōe’s short story Aghwee the Sky Monster, the character of D expresses these symptoms readily, especially in the visions he has of his dead son, Aghwee. This is significant when looking at the cultural context of the story because Oe is writing about the aftermath of WWII on Japanese society. From examining the passage where D describes to the narrator why he has visons of Aghwee, it is clear that Oe is using D’s PTSD as a metaphor for how Japan coped with being scarred on a cultural and physical level as a …show more content…

To most, the event is so traumatic that it cannot be dealt with in a clear and concise manner. Instead, those who experience PTSD obsess over the event to the point that they cannot forget what occurred, and in turn this haunts them (NIMH). D explains his own feelings on this after he has described to the narrator why he sees Aghwee. He tells the narrator, "You 're still young, probably you haven 't lost sight of anything in this world that you can never forget, that 's so dear to you you 're aware of its absence all the time” (Ōe 255). This is a telling line, because Ōe is describing how he felt after the defeat of WWII, even though this story was twenty years after the fact. PTSD makes it to where a person cannot simply let go of an event, even when it is clear they must in order to heal properly. However, with events as traumatic as the death of a child as in D’s case, or the loss of innocence and identity in the situation of Ōe and the nation of Japan, sometimes there is too much pain to handle, and the illness of PTSD is

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