Hinatsu Kōnosuke

Hinatsu Konosuke (Japanese日 夏 耿 之 介, orig. Higuchi Kunito (樋 口 国 登); born February 22, 1890 in Iida, † June 13, 1971 in Tokyo ) was a Japanese poet, literary critic and translator.

Hinatsu studied at Waseda University, where he worked as a professor of English literature. In 1915 he founded the magazine Shijin. In 1917 he debuted with the influenced by the works of Oscar Wilde and Edgar Allan Poe's poem collection Tenshin no shō (転身 の 頌). As a literary scholar, he received in 1949 for Kaitei - Zoho Meiji- Taishō shishi the Yomiuri Prize for Literature. For Nihon gendaishi taikei ( Compendium of Japanese contemporary poetry) 1951, he was awarded the Mainichi Cultural Prize.

Swell

  • La Litterature Japonaise - Hinatsu Konosuke
  • Author
  • Poetry
  • Literary scholar
  • Translation (literary )
  • Literature (Japanese)
  • University teachers ( Waseda University)
  • Japanese
  • Born in 1890
  • Died in 1971
  • Man
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