KAWABATA, YASUNARI

yäsoonäˈrē käwäˈbätä, 1899–1972, Japanese novelist. His first major work was The Izu Dancer, (1925). He came to be a leader of the school of Japanese writers that propounded a lyrical and impressionistic style, in opposition to the proletarian literature of the 1920s. Kawabata's melancholy novels often treat, in a delicate, oblique fashion, sexual relationships between men and women. For example, Snow Country (tr. 1956), probably his best-known work in the West, depicts the affair of an aging geisha and an insensitive Tokyo businessman. All Kawabata's works are distinguished by a masterful, and frequently arresting, use of imagery. Among his works in English translation are the novels Thousand Cranes (tr. 1959), The Sound of the Mountain (tr. 1970), and The Lake (tr. 1974), and volumes of short stories, The House of the Sleeping Beauties and Other Stories (tr. 1969) and First Snow on Fuji (tr. 1999). In 1968, Kawabata became the first Japanese author to receive the Nobel Prize in Literature. Four years later, in declining health and probably depressed by the suicide of his friend Yukio Mishima, he committed suicide.

See his Nobel Prize speech, Japan the Beautiful and Myself (tr. 1969); study by G. B. Petersen (1979).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Kawabata Yasunari  - 144 results

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...Kafka Ghassan Kanafani Yasunari Kawabata Nikos Kazantzakis MARSHALL...Images/Getty: cover portrait of Yasunari Kawabata, 693 Getty Images/Hulton...Ghassan Kanafani 683 Yasunari Kawabata 693 Nikos Kazantzakis...
...Ryunosuke 1892 1927 , Yokomitsu Riichi 1898 1947 , Kawabata Yasunari 1899 1972 , and Hayashi Fumiko 1903 1951 , that...between poetic and prosaic language is blurred, and Kawabata Yasunari's Scarlet Gang ofAsakusa, which is composed of...
...Torrance 470 Kawabata Yasunaris Snow Country Michael C. Brownstein 481...Torrance 470 Kawabata Yasunaris Snow Country Michael C. Brownstein 481...
...Japanese novel in Japan and the United States. Kawabata Yasunari, the Nobel laureate for literature, has written...modern Japanese realism both in aesthetic terms by Kawabata Yasunari and in terms of content by critics associated with...
...of Woman in the Works of Kawabata Yasunari and Tanizaki Junichiro...ca. 1330 . More recently, Kawabata Yasunari, the winner of the 1968 Nobel...leading male contemporaries. Kawabata Yasunari and Tanizaki Junichiro, the...
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journal articles on: Kawabata Yasunari  - 18 results

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...Andrew Feenberg suggests that Yasunari Kawabatas novel The Master of Go (1954...29 (1994-95): 111-14. (2) Yasunari Kawabata, Japan the Beautiful and Myself...63. (4) Gwen Boardman, "Kawabata Yasunari: A Critical Introduction...
...readings of "literature" that he "madly" loves. Allocating a chapter each--sometimes two chapters--to the works of Kawabata Yasunari, Murakami Haruki, Furui Yoshikichi, Mishima Yukio, Natsume Soseki, Oe Kenzaburo, and Kobayashi Hideo, he discusses...
...interior of the railway cars. 18 Back in 1923, Kawabata Yasunari had given the title "palm-of-the-hand stories...Tokyo: Tokyo Metropolitan U, 1988 . 106. Kawabata, Yasunari. Palm-of-the-Hand Stories . Trans. Lane Dunlop...
...Imaginary People); the 1987 Tanizaki Junichiro award for Yumenokizaka-Bunkiten (The Yumenokizaka Intersection); the 1989 Kawabata Yasunari award for "Yoppa-dani eno Koka" (A Descent into the Yoppa Valley); and the 1992 Japan SF award for Asa no Gasuparu...
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magazine articles on: Kawabata Yasunari  - 7 results

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...Exquisite, the Fictions of Yasunari Kawabata Were among the Most Memorable...Jason Cowley In 1938 Yasunari Kawabata was commissioned by a Tokyo...in Time: the fictive art of Kawabata Yasunari, calls his "aesthetics of ma...
...schoolchild knows that opening to Yasunari Kawabatas celebrated novel, Snow Country...travellers went there at all. Kawabata first went there in 1934, a refugee...To this day it is regarded as Kawabatas masterpiece and one of the finest...
...Nobel Prize winner in literature, Yasunari Kawabata, gave his acceptance speech. He...follow. In his short address, Kawabata recited some "farewell poems...years after he gave that speech, Kawabata committed suicide: interactive...
...down over two black cardboard circles. Its a bit like the famous story "A Row of Trees," by the Japanese writer Yasunari Kawabata: A man asks his wife if she has noticed that half the ginkgo trees on the road are bare; how can it be, he ponders...
...works by virtually every major 20th-century Japanese writer (Yukio Mishima, Jun-ichiro Tanizaki, Soseki Natsume, Yasunari Kawabata, and Kyoka Izumi), to Kabuki plays and reworkings of other traditional theatrical forms, to Murasaki Shikibus court-classic...
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newspaper articles on: Kawabata Yasunari  - 1 result

 
 
...of Genji," usually considered the first novel ever written, and go up to its two modern Nobelists, the novelists Yasunari Kawabata and Kenzaburo Oe. Though women writers were eclipsed from late medieval times until the end of the l9th century...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Kawabata Yasunari  - 4 results

 
 
KAWABATA, YASUNARI yasoona re kawa bata, 1899 1972...proletarian literature of the 1920s. Kawabatas melancholy novels often treat, in a...an insensitive Tokyo businessman. All Kawabatas works are distinguished by a masterful...
...Asturias 1968 Rene Cassin Lars Onsager Luis W. Alvarez Robert W. Holley H. Gobind Khorana Marshall W. Nirenberg Yasunari Kawabata 1969 International Labor Organization Derek H. R. Barton Odd Hassel Murray Gell-Mann Max Delbruck Alfred...
...Literature The immense public demand for fiction in postwar Japan has been fed by the prolific output of its writers. Yasunari Kawabata , who won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1968, has been praised for the delicate aesthetic sensibility of his...
...1919), by Herman Hesse, The Catcher in the Rye (1951), by J. D. Salinger, and Thousand Cranes (tr. 1956), by Yasunari Kawabata, in the ranks of the psychological novel. The tradition of the novel of manners, with its emphasis on the conventions...


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