Kosugi Tengai

Kosugi Tengai (Japanese小 杉 天 外, real name: Tamezō Kosugi (小 杉 为 蔵) * November 7, 1865 Rokugō -mura (now Misato ), Akita Prefecture, † September 1, 1952 ) was a Japanese writer.

Kosugi began his literary career as a writer of popular fiction easier, before he turned to mainly under the influence of the works of Émile Zola, the Japanese naturalism. With works such as Hatsusugata (はつ姿, 1900), Hayari - uta (はやり 唄) and Makate koitaze (魔 风 恋 风, 1903), he is considered one of the pioneers of this literary movement in Japan. In 1948, he was ( Geijutsu - Nihon ) elected to the Japanese Academy of Arts.

Swell

  • Louis Frédéric: Japan Encyclopedia. Harvard University Press, 2002 ( Original title: Japon, dictionnaire et civilization, translated by Käthe Roth), ISBN 0-674-00770-0, p 564 ( limited preview on Google Book Search ).
  • Tooson Shimazaki: " Chikuma River Sketches ", University of Hawaii Press, 1991, ISBN 9780824813147, p 128
  • Author
  • Novel, epic
  • Literature (Japanese)
  • Literature (19th century)
  • Literature ( 20th century)
  • Japanese
  • Born 1865
  • Died in 1952
  • Man
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