While studying for her master's degree, Kurahashi made her literary debut in 1960 with the publication in the
Meiji University literary magazine of the story
The Party (パルタイ,
Parutai), an acute satire on the communist left-wing sentiment commonplace among students at that time, as well as the bureaucratic dogmatism of the
Japan Communist Party (JCP) (which was not named but strongly alluded to by the title). The story won a university-wide prize and was commended by the prominent literary critic Ken Hirano in his review in the
Mainichi Shimbun. A controversy erupted when Hirano used his influence within the
Bundan to have Kurahashi's story reprinted in the prominent literary magazine
Bungakukai. The so-called "Parutai Debate" (
Parutai ronsо̄) broke out across several literary magazines as Japanese writers and critics debated whether Kurahashi's story had "literary merit" and the propriety of Hirano's promoting it, in what became a proxy war for competing views on the influence of the Communist Party in the literary world. Historian
Nick Kapur argues that the Parutai debate also reflected unspoken displeasure within the male-dominated Bundan that a critic as prominent as Hirano was promoting the work of a young female author, in their view at the expense of males. Although the Parutai controversy never reached any definitive conclusion, it won Kurahashi many spoken and unspoken enemies and would shadow her throughout her career. Also in 1960, Kurahashi published the short novel
End of Summer (夏の終り,
Natsu no owari), which was also championed by Hirano and was nominated for the
Akutagawa Prize. Although Kurahashi did not win, she was considered—along with other new writers debuting at the same time, including
Takeshi Kaiko,
Shintaro Ishihara, and
Kenzaburō Ōe—to be ranked highly among the so-called "third wave" generation of young Japanese writers. Kurahashi's 1961 novel (in fact
antinovel)
Blue Journeys (暗い旅,
Kuroi tabi), written in the formal
second person, caused much controversy among critics and led
Jun Etō to accuse her of plagiarism. In Etō's view, Kurahashi's novel simply imitated the earlier novel
La modification (Second Thoughts) by the French writer
Michel Butor. A fierce debate broke out in the press; Kurahashi's defenders were joined by
Takeo Okuno. Whether influenced by the dispute or by the death of her father in 1962, after this Kurahashi left the graduate school. ==Later life and works==