In 1952, while still in college, Okuno had already attracted attention from the Japanese literary world for his influential essay "
Osamu Dazai Theory" (
Dazai Osamu ron), originally published in the journal
Ōokayama Bungaku. Beginning with this essay, Okuno became known as one of the foremost practitioners of "individual author theory," later writing similar books on other notable authors, such as
Ango Sakaguchi (1972) and
Sei Itō (1980). In 1954, he helped co-found the journal
Contemporary Criticism (現代評論,
Gendai Hyо̄ron) along with literary critic Tatsu Hattori and others, and in 1958, he launched the similarly named journal
Contemporary Critique (現代批評,
Gendai Hihyо̄) with
Takaaki Yoshimoto and others. In the early 1960s, following the
1960 Anpo protests, Okuno became a leading figure in an effort to divorce literature from politics, above all the politics of the
Japan Communist Party and its dictum that all literature should serve the cause of socialist revolution. In a 1963 essay titled "The Bankruptcy of 'Politics and Literature' Theory,” Okuno urged Japanese authors to move away from a view of "literature as but one aspect of politics" to "politics as but one aspect of literature." Calling on writers to develop "literary autonomy," Okuno praised
Kōbō Abe's book
The Woman in the Dunes (
Suna no onna) and
Yukio Mishima's book
A Beautiful Star (
Utsukushii hoshi) as "epoch-making" works that had broken free of ideology and dogma to explore the authors' own subjectivities, whereas he criticized works by books by
Yoshie Hotta and
Hiroshi Noma as "failed works of non-literature" for being too blatantly political. Okuno was supported in this stance by other noted literary critics including Kōichi Isoda and Takaaki Yoshimoto, and despite a fierce debate initially, by 1964 most of the Japanese literary world had moved firmly into Okuno's camp. In 1972, Okuno proposed his well-known theory of "primary landscape" (
原風景,
gen fūkei), which remains an important concept today in the analysis of Japanese literature. From 1976 to 1991, Okuno was the literary editor for the
Sankei Shimbun newspaper. In 1984, his book ''The Structure of '
Ma'
(〈間〉の構造, 'Ma' no kōzō
) won the Taiko Hirabayashi Literary Award, and in 1994, his book The Legend of Yukio Mishima'' won an from the
Cultural Affairs Agency. In 1991 Okuno was appointed as a trustee of Tama Art University. He retired from teaching in September 1997 but died of liver failure two months later. He was posthumously awarded the
Order of the Rising Sun, Gold Rays with Rosette. ==References==