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ONE DAY


Atsushi and akutagawa sitting together . Suddenly

Atsushi :- Akutagawa

Akutagawa :- What is it jinko . You wanna fight . Sorry but i have no inteest in fighting weaklings like you. 

Atsushi - Aku- no. I was just saying that my hair is white with a black streak and yours is black with a bit of white. It's just like pairs right. Hahaa

Akutagawa :- *slightly blushing* What are you saying idiot !! Disgusting !! * runs away*

Atsushi :- Huhh what happened to him!! Did i say something wrong.

.

.

.

Chuuya and dazai at the back :- No it's because unknowingly you said the truth.


FACT :-

Nakajima atsushi is often compared to Akutagawa because their works had a Chinese classical subtext:

Because of his use of Chinese classical subtexts, Nakajima is often compared to the early Akutagawa, but here he comes out squarely against Akutagawa's position that plotless fiction is the purest form of fiction; Nakajima insists that the plot is 'the backbone' of a story and that contempt for events in fiction is like 'a child's forced and unnatural mimetic way of wanting to become a grown-up.'

- Faye Yuan Kleeman, Under an Imperial Sun: Japanese Colonial Literature of Taiwan and the South

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