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CHAPTER IV ANALYSIS
Based on what is stated in the problem formulation, this analysis part is devided in to two subchapters. The first part discusses the sexual pattern of Otoko seen from
her characterization. The second part discusses the causal factors that caused Otoko’s homosexuality.
A. Otoko’s Sexual Patterns
There is only one character disscused in this study named Otoko. Abrams stated that there are two kind of character in the story based on its importance in the story,
major  and  minor  character.  Based  on  his  theory,  Otoko  is  the  main  character  in  the novel. Otoko was  substantially involved in the main action as well as becoming the
central and the most important in the story Abrams, 1999:20. The story was focused on  the  character  named  Ueno  Otoko  who  experienced  complexity  of  her  life  thus
affected her sexual pattern. Based on  the internal complexity, as  Laurence Perrine said  in  his  book 1978:
71, Otoko is a dynamic character who experienced changes from the begining to the end  of  the  story.  Otoko’s  sexual  pattern  changed  at  her  adulthood.  She  started  as  a
heterosexual  person  at  her  childhood  then  became  a  homosexual  person  at  her adulthood.
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Further,  to  intepret  the  change  of  Otoko’s  sexual  pattern  seen  from  the characterization,  Murphy’s  nine  ways  of  characterization  will  be  used.  They  are
personal description, character as seen by another, speech, past life, conversation with others, reactions, thoughts, direct comment of the author, and mannerism.
As  it  had  been  explained,  Otoko’s  sexual  pattern  was  devided  into  two, heterosexual and homosexual. Back to the definition of the term homosexuality, it is
sexual  behavior  or  sexual  relationship  between  individuals  of  the  same  sex.  Otoko was a hetero sexual person when she was young, then she shifted into homosexual in
her adulthood. 1. A Heterosexual Person
Otoko had a relationship with a man when she was young. The story began with the desire of Otoko’s past lover named Mr. Oki Toshio to meet her when he was in his
middle age after twenty four years past. Oki’s desire awoke his memory of Otoko and their love story.
That had come to mind again this year end, and he had impulsively decided to go  to  Kyoto.  He  had  also  been  stirred  by  a  defiant  wish  to  see  Ueno  Otoko
again  after  all  these  years,  and  to  listen  to  the  bells  with  her Kawabata, 1996:4.
The theory of characterization by Murphy was applied. According to the theory, the quotation above was  direct comment from the author and past life. It was a direct
comment from the author to describe Oki’s feeling and thought about his will to see Otoko. It also showed that Otoko was not a homosexual from the first place. Oki used