![]() ![]() The smell reminds Ono vividly of both events. ![]() While Ono never discusses the circumstances surrounding his rupture with his parents, the smell of burning is a symbolic link that associates his loss of his parents with the loss of his wife Michiko in a bomb attack. Importantly, Ono’s father’s decision to burn Ono’s paintings only makes Ono more determined to become an artist against his father’s wishes, which ultimately leads to a split between Ono and his parents. It also evokes the smell after a bomb killed Ono’s wife. The smell of burning evokes both the trauma of having his own paintings destroyed by his father when he was fifteen years old, and the trauma of having accidentally caused the paintings of his protégé Kuroda to be burnt by the authorities. ![]() Burning’s first association is with the smoke produced by paintings being destroyed, and its second association is with the smoke produced by bombs. ![]() The smell of burning brings two kinds of associations for Ono, both having to do with the loss of what is most precious to him. Although the novel’s narrator, Masuji Ono, never describes the grief and pain he has suffered over a lifetime punctuated by trauma, the way these traumas impact him is suggested by the melancholy feeling that comes over him when he smells burning. ![]()
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