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  1. Analysis. A new narrative voice declares that he has lived a shameful life. He doesn’t even know, he claims, what it’s like to be human. Ordinary things seem foreign and strange to him. When he was a child, for example, it took him a long time to grasp the purpose of a small bridge connecting one train platform to another—he thought the ...

  2. Prologue Summary. An unnamed narrator recounts three photographs of Yozo Oba, the author of the notebooks that make up the main text of No Longer Human. The first photograph depicts Yozo as an impish, off-putting child. The effect of Yozo’s feigned smile is “unclean and even nauseating” (14).

  3. Part 2 Summary: “The Second Notebook”. The second notebook recounts Yozo’s high school and early college years. Yozo moves in with relatives to attend school; he finds being in a new town more agreeable than his hometown. By now, Yozo has perfected his clown act. However, Yozo’s persona is tested by Takeichi, an unintelligent classmate ...

  4. The protagonist of No Longer Human, Yozo is a depressed Japanese man who feels alienated from everyone around him. He has an almost inexplicable fear of humans, finding it hard to understand why people… read analysis of Yozo.

  5. No Longer Human examines societal perceptions surrounding depression and the unfortunate stigma that is often attached to mental health struggles. Almost everyone in Yozo ’s life fails to show genuine sympathy about his depression. And though he does have people who technically support him in times of hardship, they still seem to look down on ...

  6. Analysis. Yozo is expelled from college because of his involvement in Tsuneko ’s suicide. He spends his days at Flatfish ’s house, and though his family doesn’t contact him, it becomes clear to him that his brothers periodically send small amounts of money to Flatfish. Flatfish also forbids Yozo from leaving the house—he’s afraid ...

  7. Sep 13, 2021 · No Longer Human was the Japanese author’s last complete work before he committed suicide in 1948. As a semi-autobiographical work, it depicts much of Dazai’s own life through the eyes of the main character, Oba Yozo, from his failures with love to his participation in the Communist Party to the momentary bits of tenderness in his life.