Machine (novel)

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Machine (機械, Kikai) is a 1930 novel by the Japanese author Riichi Yokomitsu.[1] It is one of the seminal works of modernism in Japanese literature.[2] Set in a factory that makes metal nameplates, the story considers the effects of modern life on workers.[3] The book's events unfold around conflicts over trade secrets kept hidden in a room in the center of the factory.[4] Writing in 1930, Japanese literary critic Hideo Kobayashi noted that "the author of this work is not straining in the least for a new way of grasping human psychology" but concluded that the story is about "how a writer arrives at what he believes."[5]

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