Analysis Of Haruki Murakami's 'Town Of Cats'

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In Haruki Murakami’s Town of Cats, the protagonist, Tengo, embarks upon a journey to visit his father at a sanatorium for answers about his identity. Tengo recalls the unorthodox childhood faced alongside his father with the abandonment of his mother and blames him for not giving him the life he wanted as a child. Tengo knows his mother cheated on his father and he has doubts about his father being his real father. When he sees his father, Tengo has an altercation with his father and expects him to answer his questions about his identity. His father asks him to read him a story and he then proceeds to respond to his angry son with a metaphorical statement about his childhood and future. Upon an interview with John Wray from The Paris Review, Murakami reveals one of his intentions in writing; “. . . “family” has played an overly significant role in Japanese literature. I wanted to depict my main character as an independent, …show more content…

First, Tengo’s father responds to Tengo’s reading of The Town of Cats, “When a vacuum forms, something has to come along to fill it. That’s what everybody does” (Murakami 21). Then, Tengo’s father answers the controversial question, “Just a vacuum. Your mother joined her body with a vacuum and gave birth to you. I filled that vacuum” (Murakami 22). The multiple use of vacuum symbolizes emptiness. In the story Tengo reads, the vacuum is the empty town and as we see the portrayal of events, the filling in the emptiness of the town are the cats. Based on this theory, Tengo’s father is trying to tell his son the identity of his biological father doesn’t matter, it holds no weight thus the answer is an empty one. Regardless of the true identity of Tengo’s biological father, it was this very man who assumed the role as a father figure in Tengo’s life rather than leave Tengo fatherless and

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