In the early 1950s, Shusaku Endo spent several years as an exchange
student studying in Paris. Around him existentialism, Sartre, and
Beckett were making the city the literary and philosophical capital of
the world. But for Endo, the experience was deeply alienating, and he
came away infected with tuberculosis, his studies incomplete, and having
convinced himself that there could be no cultural commerce between East
and West. Foreign Studies consists of three linked narratives
exploring this theme. The first part, "A Summer in Rouen," concerns
Kudo, a Japanese student invited to France in the 1950s. It is a lucent
snapshot of a young man who feels adrift in a Western country. The
second part, "Araki Thomas," sees Endo on familiar territory as he tells
of an apostate Japanese Catholic who has visited 17th-century Rome. "And
You, Too," the third part, is the story of Tanaka, a Japanese scholar of
French literature who visits France in the 1960s to research the life
and work of the Marquis de Sade.