Abstract:
This study interprets Japanese novelist Kobo Abe’s The Woman in the
Dunes in terms of the interplay of water and sand, taken now as a dialectic of
disorder and order, entropy and negative entropy (negentropy). The
protagonist Niki is entrapped not only by nature, symbolized by the
encroaching sands, but by society: he is subjected to forced labor and to thirst
by a community itself overtaken by moral and social entropy or dissolution.
Thus he seems to embody an even greater dissipation of energy, a more
encompassing disorder, homogeneity, stillness, disintegration and sense of
death. Yet when Niki discovers water in the sands he unexpectedly acquires a
vital negentropic energy, a life-energy. Water saves and sustains him and
becomes the progenitor of his new self, the symbol of his rebirth. A new life
now begins for him in the sand-entrapped community. However, while chaos
theory describes the self-organizing of disorder and its deep structures of order,
chaotic systems are also prone to unpredictable fluctuations and bifurcations.
The same is true of Niki’s new life, and the novel has an uncertain, radically
open ending, one that befits all chaotic systems. It also befits water and sand
and Abe’s protean self, in all their fluidity.
Citation:
Marroum, M. (2008). Water and Sand: The Dialectic of Entropy and Negentropy in Kobo Abe’s The Woman in the Dunes. Concentric: Literary and Cultural Studies, 34(1), 135-156.