Julie Otsuka's When The Emperor Was Divine

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In Julie Otsuka’s novel When the Emperor was Divine, a mother and her two children are incarcerated during the time of World War II because of their Japanese ancestry, and are brought to a camp out in the deserts of Utah. The mother and children struggle with their ancestry and their heritage, as they are not American or Japanese, but one in the same. When reading through the novel, some might think the mother completely throws away the heritage of who she, and who her family really are; that they show disloyalty to country and to self. Sophocles, writer of Antigone, would likely concur. His strong, rebellious, and iconic female character, Antigone, defies the rules of her King in honoring the death of her “betraying” brother in standing firm …show more content…

Antigone defied the wishes of her King – the ruler of the country – to bury her brother, and consequently died. King Creon stated, “I caught her in naked rebellion, the traitor, the only one in the whole city…. I’m going to kill her!” (line 732-734) The treacherous act of Antigone defying the country she loved and the people she loved, showed an act of bravery against the King, disloyalty to her country, and loyalty to her brother. Her disloyalty was conveyed quite different than that of The Family in Otsuka’s novel. The mother burned and trashed that which made her Japanese: her kimonos, tea pots, chopsticks, and eating peanut butter sandwiches instead of rice balls. The Children are equal in thought: “We would listen to their music. We would dress just like they did…. And if our mother called out to us on the street by our real names we would turn away and pretend not to know her. We would never be mistaken for the enemy again!” (114) Otsuka shows the disloyalty to country in that the Japanese people wanted to be Americans. “In February a team of army recruits arrived looking for volunteers, and the loyalty questionnaire was given…. Loyalty. Disloyalty. Allegiance. Obedience. ‘Words,’ she said, ‘it’s all just words.’” (99) Otsuka wants us to realize the Japanese didn’t want to be …show more content…

In the time of Antigone around 400 B.C., the importance of pleasing the gods was held at high value. The Greeks believed in fate, and that the gods controlled the things that would happen in their lives with the decisions that they made. Antigone defied the rules of Creon for her brother because she believed that the gods would not have approved of leaving him to the animals, and therefore, Antigone decided she would rather obey her beliefs than listen to the King. In the 1940’s during World War II when Otsuka’s novel was set, having loyalty and pride in the country that bombed America seemed an absurd notion. Japanese families were arrested, torn apart, and killed because of their loyalty to the Emperor and Japan. This may be a factor in why The Family would leave behind their past so quickly. They did not want to feel fear, to be feared, to be judged, or to be ostracized by the people around them. These motives aid in an explanation of why the ‘disloyalty’ in Antigone and When the Emperor was Divine have such a strong

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