Han's Crime
Han's Crime is a short story by Japanese writer Naoya Shiga first published in 1913 in the magazine Shirakaba. The story follows a police hearing after a woman was killed during a circus knifethrowing act by the hands of her husband, the professional knifethrower Han.
Plot
At a circus performance, a young woman is killed during a knifethrowing act by the hands of her husband Han, a professional knifethrower of Chinese descent and a devout, converted Christian. Han is arrested immediately after the incident. A judge first questions the circus director, then Han's assistant, and finally the defendant. The circus director and the assistant emphasise Han's professionalism, his educated, good manners, and his impeccable conduct. On second thought, the assistant adds that the couple had always been kind to others, but treated each other disparagingly.In his testimony, Han confesses that he detested his wife since she gave birth to a child she had from another man, and had contemplated the possibility of her death. Yet, although he hadn't been afraid of being sent to jail, which couldn't have been worse than his unhappy marriage, he felt too weak to commit such a crime, which he would also have considered a sin. He hadn't had any intention to kill his wife on this day, and has no explanation for the incident. Asked by the judge, Han admits freely that he felt no sorrow after his wife's death. The judge sends Han out of the room and, suddenly feeling agitated, declares him not guilty.
Legacy
Han's Crime ranks, along with The Razor and Seibei and his Gourds, as one of the stories which established Naoya's reputation as a writer.In later years, literary historians pointed out the protagonist's rejection of an imposed moral consciousness or viewing life and identity as causal continuities, the rejection of the notion that a judgment can be other than arbitrary, the demonstration of the inability of an organised society to deal with individual truthfulness, and an influence of Friedrich Nietzsche's "superman" who defines his own morality.