essay
by ANNA DUBOSC
photo
by RICHARD WONG
Anna Dubosc, a Paris-based writer, is the daughter of Japanese poet Kumiko Muraoka. When avant-garde filmmaker Chris Marker traveled to Tokyo in 1964, commissioned by the French Government to create a film about the Olympic Games, he instead made a movie about Kumiko, titled ‘The Koumiko Mystery’. Here, Anna Dubosc writes about her mother’s love-hate relationship with Japan, alongside photos taken by kumiko’s friend Richard Wong.
I never knew how to write my mother’s name. The exact transcription is Kumiko. That’s how she spelled her first name, even at the risk of it being mispronounced. In my early writings, I used that spelling but later switched to Koumiko.
My mother wrote and spoke to us in French, in her own poetic and ambiguous way. I was always wary of that ambiguity, afraid my mother would remain foreign, elusive, unpronounceable — as if misunderstanding were contagious, and I myself were at risk of misinterpretation.
My mother was born in 1936 in Manchuria, to Japanese parents. During Japan’s invasion of Manchuria, her father obtained a customs position in Ryojun, later transferring to Harbin, where they remained until the Soviet invasion and the evacuation of the Japanese in 1946.
Until the age of 10, my mother lived happily on a land she believed was her own. What did she feel years later, upon learning of the atrocities committed by the Imperial Japanese Army? The scorched-earth strategies that claimed the lives of 2.7 million Chinese civilians, the mass rapes, the experiments conducted on civilians and prisoners of war, the Unit 731 victims subjected to vivisections without anesthesia, exposed to germs to test biological weapons?
Did her rejection of Japan crystallize at that moment, or was it earlier, in 1945, upon Japan’s surrender and the loss of the Manchurian territories, just days after the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki?
She never stopped writing about that rupture, that tearing away. About the long cargo ship journey back to Japan, the illness, the hunger, the dead buried at sea, the quarantine. The discovery of an insular, humid country ravaged by war.
Thus begin her Mémoires d’une somnambule (Memoirs of a Sleepwalker):
The days pass on the ship held motionless, equidistant from land.
This unusual gentleness of the mountains, this unusual humidity in the air. This foreign land, unknown, mysterious. And again, unending days and days on the motionless ship.
Had something changed? Or had nothing changed? I didn’t know, I didn’t think about anything. I just remained there, facing that blue of the mountains. The strange blue dream, the chromatic dream. The vague premonition of something I was unable to grasp, discern, or articulate, something so slowly oppressive.
I was far from understanding that the port had already closed behind me. Silently.
I found myself in an unfamiliar place, in a foreign country, in an “elsewhere.” Ah, that impossible “elsewhere”! That Japan!
Drafts of air from all sides. The space so temporary, so incredibly precarious, without axis, without reference points, without walls, but only paper doors that slide, that flee, that escape… How could I find myself in this space? What could I lean on? The void? The persistent humid cold, and perhaps the sadness as well.
I know little about Kumiko in the 1960s — the adult Kumiko, the Kumiko of Tokyo. She spoke little to us of that time. She endlessly revisited her happy childhood in Manchuria, Harbin and its wide-open skies, as if everything after were a mistake or as if time had stopped in August 1946.
I discovered late Le Mystère Koumiko (The Koumiko Mystery), the film Chris Marker made about my mother during the Tokyo Olympics in 1964. I can’t recall who first told me about the film — my father, perhaps, or a friend of my mother’s — certainly not her, absolutely not. The film opens with a race competition. Among the spectators is my mother, whose portrait Chris Marker begins in voiceover: “Koumiko is not the model Japanese woman, assuming such a creature exists. Nor is she a model woman or a modern woman. She is not a case, not a cause, not a class, not a race.”
I remember feeling uneasy about Chris Marker’s tone and the familiarity with which he addressed her, suspecting an intimacy or seduction between them. This, when Kumiko had raised my sister and me far from men, as if trying to preserve her own childhood or prolong it through us.
Watching the film, I also recall my amazement at the playful side of this young woman who was not yet my mother but already had her language, her uniqueness.
“What do you expect from life?” Chris Marker asks her in the film. She answers: “I ask for a lot of things and very few things at the same time. I wouldn’t need much in life — just to look, to know how to listen. Many things, so many things still, but it’s all mixed up without order. Maybe that’s my misfortune.”
The foundation of her writing is already there, in its disarray, in its misfortune, in that feeling of exile in her own country.
At Kumiko’s funeral, I met Richard Wong, a Chinese man from Singapore who had been living in Paris for 30 years. He showed me photos he had taken of my mother in Tokyo between 1964 and 1966. I didn’t know that Kumiko either.
Richard Wong had come to Tokyo in 1964 to study Japanese, joining his Singaporean friend Chua Lam.
The two of them shared an apartment in Shinjuku, near O¯kubo. Every day, they went to the cinema on the fourth floor of the Museum of Modern Art.
It was there that Chua first met my mother. He had heard her laugh in the darkness and waited for the lights to come back on to discover the face behind such a laugh.
At the time, Kumiko lived in Ko¯enji, a neighborhood in central Tokyo, in a tiny studio of just a few tatami mats. Richard and Chua were always at her place. They were inseparable, like in Jules and Jim, Richard kept telling me. To me, she evokes instead those women in Ozu’s films — the ones who refuse to marry, who drink, who smoke, who worry their fathers. Women who symbolize a changing society.
I always knew my mother had loved a Chinese man, that he was the only man she had ever loved. I heard this from different people at different times, but never from her. She spoke of Chua without defining their relationship. She simply said, “Chua.”
In the late 1980s, after he had become a famous columnist and producer, my mother took us to Hong Kong to see him, but I have no memory of him. Is this a reconstruction? An invention? Did I imagine my mother’s plan to reconnect with Chua? Did she meet him one evening? Did she leave my sister and me at the hotel, or did we meet him together in a café? I no longer know. But he was there, in her stories, in her words, in that strange language in which we grew up. Our own country.
Richard Wong insisted that she was very happy at the time and didn’t talk about Harbin. It’s true she is smiling in all the photos, but I think that happiness was tied, paradoxically, to Manchuria, and that those two Chinese men reminded her of the land she had lost, even though they were from Singapore. I believe she never truly lived outside that nostalgia, that this feeling shaped and dominated her life, as she wrote in Arithmétique Horaire (The Arithmetic of Time).
Color floods the city today. That’s why the sheets, the chairs, the air, the window, and the surface of the table are all tinged; everything is tinged with the color of rusted iron… That’s what she wants to explain.
Yet, it’s implausible that her room has anything to do with the current city. If it’s connected to the city, it’s the city of 1944. If she opens the window, she only sees the city of 1944. And if she closes it, it’s the same.
Because of all this, she almost suffocates. Yet she doesn’t show it, as she has long since lost the ability to breathe.
Kumiko left Japan in 1966. Richard and Chua accompanied her to the port of Yokohama. They waited for the cargo ship to depart. Kumiko stood on the deck. They watched her drift away and disappear. Richard said she never truly left Chua — only Japan.
At the first crack that opened, I rushed into the void, a blind rocket. There was an urgent need to act — immediately! Cross the border, pass through the door so miraculously ajar while it was still open — quickly, very quickly! Leave, escape, save myself! Break free from confinement, deportation, the trap! Leave, leave, depart! Never again see this country of misunderstanding that had caused me so much despair. I was so panicked, so tense, so terrified, so frantic. So full of joy! I felt a slightly crooked smile creep up as I held in my hand the multicolored streamers that were being torn apart.
I’m leaving! I’m leaving! I’m leaving! Finally!
END
THE ITALICIZED TEXTS ARE EXCERPTS FROM KUMIKO MURAOKA’S MÉMOIRES D’UNE SOMNAMBULE (PUBLISHED IN REVUE DES ÉTUDES SLAVES, 2001) AND ARITHMÉTIQUE HORAIRE (PUBLISHED BY LA DÉLIRANTE, 2013).
[Table of contents]
editor’s letter
Read the article
empire of signs
by Roland Barthes
cover #1 takashi murakami
interview by Jérôme Sans
takashi murakami
interview by Jérôme Sans
ryoko sekiguchi
interview by Mark Alizart and Olivier Zahm
cover #2 motoko ishibashi
Subscription
motoko ishibashi
interview by Aleph Molinari
atsuko tanaka
Subscription
sexual assault breaking the silence
by Karyn Nishimura-Poupée
juergen teller and nobuyoshi araki
Subscriptionchiho aoshima
Subscriptionhajime sawatari
Subscription
suwa nagano
by Stéphane Sednaoui
fetish magazines
by Katerina Jebb
tadanoori yokoo
text by André Michel
kazumi asamura hayashi
Subscriptionkeiichi tanaami
Subscription
fumihiro hayashi
text by Olivier Zahm
nobuyoshi araki
portrait by Chikashi Suzuki
tomoo gokita
interview by Olivier Zahm
cover #4 tomoo gokita
Subscription
loewe s/s 2025
photography by Suffo Moncloa
hajime sorayama
Subscription
my father
by Rick Owens
announcement to humanity
by Ryoko Sekiguchi
cover #3 katerina jebb
Subscription
cover #5 loewe s/s 2025
photography by Suffo Moncloa
masahisa fukase
Read the article
hajime kinoko
interview by Olivier Zahm
raiki yamamoto
Subscriptioncover #6 masahisa fukase
Subscription
kunichi nomura
text by Aaron Rose
aya takano
Subscriptiontomoyo kawari
Subscription
masaru hatanaka
interview by Aleph Molinari
why japan?
by Urs Fischer, Ramdane Touhami, Stéphane Sednaoui
cover #8 esther rose-mcgregor in valentino s/s 2025
photography by Hart Lëshkina
why japan?
by Helmut Lang
minoru nomata
Subscription
in praise of shadows
by Jun'ichirō Tanizaki
best of the season s/s 2025
photography by Takashi Homma
purple beauty nails
by Mei Kawajiri
ryūichi sakamoto
Subscription
valentino s/s 2025
photography by Hart Lëshkina
nobuyoshi araki
Subscription
cover #10 bottega veneta
photography by Nikolai von Bismarck
balenciaga s/s 2025
photography by Juergen Teller
kazuo ohno
Subscription
cover #7 prada s/s 2025
photography by Takashi Homma
butoh the dance of darkness
photography by Nikolai von Bismarck
cover #9 balenciaga s/s 2025
photography by Juergen Teller
tomihiro kono
photography by Joe Lai
cover #12 comme des garçons s/s 2025
photography by Ola Rindal
comme des garçons s/s 2025
photography by Ola Rindal
cover #11 nobuyoshi araki
Subscription
chanel s/s 2025
photography by Chikashi Suzuki
the japanese lessons we refuse to learn
by Daido Moriyama
dualité by brioni and lalique
photography by Olivier Zahm
pink eiga
Subscription
cover #18 sakura andō in chanel s/s 2025
photography by Chikashi Suzuki
noritoshi hirakawa
Subscription
tomo koizumi
photography by Chikashi Suzuki
trails
by Takashi Homma
koji kimura
by André Michel
cover #13 dualité by brioni and lalique
photography by Olivier Zahm
daido moriyama
Subscription
erotica
by Olivier Zahm
purple story
Read the articletakuro kuwata
Subscription
cover #16 saint laurent by anthony vaccarello s/s 2025
photography by Takashi Homma
setsuko klossowska de rola
Subscription
cover #15 paul & joe
photography by Olivier Zahm
why japan?
by Coco Capitán
alejandro garcia contreras
Subscription
casablanca s/s 2025
photography by Keizo Motoda
why japan?
by Stefano Pilati
saint laurent by anthony vaccarello s/s 2025
photography by Takashi Homma
why japan?
by André
best of men s/s 2025
Photography by Kejichi Nitta
kei ninomiya
interview by Olivier Zahm
anders edström
Subscription
zen gardens
by Takashi Homma
wabi-sabi spiritual values
by Leonard Koren
wim wenders
interview by Olivier Zahm and Aleph Molinari
miu miu s/s 2025
photography by Coco Capitán
ruth asawa
Subscriptionkazuyo sejima
Subscription
waves
by Takashi Homma
jun takahashi
interview by Aleph Molinari
cover #14 casablanca s/s 2025
photography by Keizo Motoda
kumiko
by Anna Dubosc
yōko yamanaka
interview by Olivier Zahm
mariko mori
Subscription
cover #17 miu miu s/s 2025
photography by Coco Capitán
the tokyo toilet
by Koji Yanai
ann lee in anzen zone
by Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster
young designers s/s 2025
Photography by Dasom Han
kenshu shintsubo
Subscription
why japan?
by Setsuko
the original hotel okura
by Valerie Sadoun
kyoto international conference center
by Sachio Otani
tadashi kawamata
interview by Aleph Molinari
purple beauty make-up
photography by Eamonn Zeel Freel
self-portrait
Takashi Homma
kids
by Takashi Homma
hideaki kawashima
Subscriptionyoshitomo nara
Subscriptionyasujirō ozu
Subscriptionthe isamu noguchi garden museum
Subscription
yoko and john in karuizawa
by François Simon
by Roland Barthes
interview by Jérôme Sans
interview by Jérôme Sans
interview by Mark Alizart and Olivier Zahm
interview by Aleph Molinari
by Karyn Nishimura-Poupée
by Katerina Jebb
text by André Michel
text by Olivier Zahm
interview by Olivier Zahm
photography by Suffo Moncloa
photography by Suffo Moncloa
by Rick Owens
by Ryoko Sekiguchi
by Stéphane Sednaoui
interview by Olivier Zahm
portrait by Chikashi Suzuki
text by Aaron Rose
interview by Aleph Molinari
by Urs Fischer, Ramdane Touhami, Stéphane Sednaoui
by Helmut Lang
photography by Takashi Homma
photography by Takashi Homma
by Mei Kawajiri
photography by Hart Lëshkina
photography by Hart Lëshkina
photography by Joe Lai
photography by Juergen Teller
photography by Juergen Teller
photography by Nikolai von Bismarck
photography by Nikolai von Bismarck
photography by Ola Rindal
photography by Ola Rindal
by Jun'ichirō Tanizaki
photography by Olivier Zahm
photography by Olivier Zahm
photography by Keizo Motoda
photography by Keizo Motoda
photography by Chikashi Suzuki
by Takashi Homma
by André Michel
by Daido Moriyama
by Olivier Zahm
by Stefano Pilati
by Coco Capitán
photography by Olivier Zahm
photography by Takashi Homma
photography by Takashi Homma
by André
Photography by Kejichi Nitta
interview by Olivier Zahm
by Takashi Homma
by Leonard Koren
photography by Coco Capitán
photography by Coco Capitán
by Takashi Homma
interview by Aleph Molinari
interview by Olivier Zahm
by Anna Dubosc
photography by Chikashi Suzuki
photography by Chikashi Suzuki
interview by Olivier Zahm and Aleph Molinari
by Koji Yanai
by Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster
Photography by Dasom Han
by Setsuko
by Valerie Sadoun
by Sachio Otani
interview by Aleph Molinari
photography by Eamonn Zeel Freel
Takashi Homma
by Takashi Homma
by François Simon