Representing human consciousness as multiple, contradictory, and shifting rather than unified—a modern technique Shikibu anticipated centuries ago.
Murasaki Shikibu's characters rarely possess consistent, unified selves; instead, they contain multitudes, contradictions, and competing desires. Genji is simultaneously noble and selfish, devoted and faithless, aesthetic sensualist and spiritual seeker. Rather than resolving these contradictions, Shikibu holds them in productive tension, allowing readers to recognize this fractured multiplicity as psychologically truthful. Contemporary writers often assume character consistency; Shikibu teaches that authentic representation demands capturing the fragmented self—the person who is capable of cruelty and tenderness in the same afternoon, who believes contradictory things simultaneously. Developing this capacity strengthens literary fiction considerably because it acknowledges psychological reality: humans are not unified subjects but constellations of impulses, histories, and contradictory desires. By resisting the urge to make characters coherent and instead allowing their fragmentation to remain visible, writers create figures who feel authentically human rather than narratively convenient. This approach requires accepting ambiguity and trusting readers to tolerate complexity without resolution.
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