Description
Book SynopsisIn the early 1950s fisherfolk and other villagers around Minamata Bay on the western coast of Kyushu, Japan, began to suffer from mysterious and often fatal symptoms of what came to be known as Minamata disease. It was not until 1968 that the government acknowledged its causeorganic mercury poisoning from effluent released by Chisso Corporation, a chemical manufacturer and the largest employer in the Japanese city for which the disease was named. For decades the company denied responsibility and was joined by the Japanese government in its attempt to cover up the problem despite lawsuits and political protests. In this compelling oral history, Ogata Masato, fisherman and Minamata disease sufferer, tells of the devastation of methyl mercury poisoning. Spanning fifty years, his story describes the impact of industrial pollution on his own life, on his extended family, and on the fishing culture of the Shiranui Sea. A one-time leader of Minamata disease patients seeking certification and
Trade ReviewIt is an important story, focusing on the socioeconomic aspects that get short shrift in the biomedical literature. The book recounts Masato's childhood, coming of age, self-realization, and the crusade he carried out to gain recognition for sufferers of Minamata disease. * CHOICE *
Oiwa Keibo eloquently transcribes Masato's story from early days and a simple life fishing the Shiranui Sea, through the growing shadow of the disease across family community and livelihood, to a struggle for compensation marked by growing self-awareness and powers of leadership and, in an extraordinary act of redemption, the decision to withdraw from the certification process for which he had fought so long and hard, and take control over his own fate, free of dependency. Ogata rows the eternal sea as the pilot of his soul-disease and its discourse transcended. * Times Higher Education *
Ogata has a message that goes further than what happened in Minamata. * Kyoto Journal *
Wonderfully translated and interpreted now for a Western audience, what was a worthy book has become a great book that articulates the pain of a sensitive pilgrim recounting a dramatic and universal tale of progress. -- Gavan McCormack, The Australian National University
This book is a diamond, an eloquently told life history of compelling importance and profound depth. Masato's story is relevant to English readers on many levels, not just as a personal account of an environmental tragedy and travesty with global implications, but also as an exposé of the ways some corporations and governments degrade humankind and the earth, as an exploration of life in a traditional Japanese community, and as a unique opportunity to learn from a man of extraordinary spirit, dignity, intelligence, and wisdom. -- Richard Nelson, author of The Island Within
Table of ContentsPart 1 Translator's Introduction Part 2 Prologue: "Out to the Mythological Sea" Part 3 Part I Chapter 4 A Vibrant Village Chapter 5 The Bitter Sea Chapter 6 Competing Souls Chapter 7 What's Going On? Chapter 8 Two Hints Chapter 9 Within the Circle Chapter 10 School Days Chapter 11 A Family Ordeal Chapter 12 Leaving Home Chapter 13 A Compass Restored Part 14 Part II Chapter 15 Rising Tides Chapter 16 Social Activism Chapter 17 Life Changes Chapter 18 Leaving the Movement Chapter 19 The Depths of Despair Chapter 20 Facing My Demons Chapter 21 Tokoyo no fune, Boat to the Eternal World Chapter 22 Bearing Witness Chapter 23 A Will of Stone Chapter 24 A Place of Atonement Part 25 Part III Chapter 26 Beneath the Light of the Sun and the Moon Chapter 27 The Chisso Within Us Chapter 28 Keep the Embers Glowing Chapter 29 Nusari, Embracing Life as a Gift Chapter 30 Moyainaoshi, Moored Together Again Chapter 31 Epilogue