Ochiai Naobumi

Naobumi Ochiai (Japanese落 合 直 文; orig. Ayukai Morimitsu (鲇 贝 盛 光) * December 22, 1861, † December 16, 1903 ) was a Japanese poet and literary scholar.

Ochiai Naobumi was adopted in 1878 by the family Ochiai, while he was studying at the Shinto school. In 1881 he went to Tokyo and continued his education at the University of Tokyo, where he also taught occasionally. As a poet he aspired to, the traditional lyric forms with a new sensibility to fill ( Waka ). Became known Kojo Shiragiku no Uta (1888 ), a transfer of a Chinese poem by Inoue Tetsujiro. Who did much as a promoter of young talents such as Yosano Akiko, whose works he published in his publishing house. As a literary scholar, he joined inter alia, as co-author of the first great commentary on the overall Ōkagami forth ( with Konakamura Yoshizō ).

Swell

  • J. Thomas Rimer: " Columbia Anthology of Modern Japanese Literature: Abridged Edition," Columbia University Press, 2011, ISBN 9780231157230, pp. 24-25
  • Steven D. Carter: " Traditional Japanese Poetry: An Anthology ", Stanford University Press, 1993, ISBN 9780804722124, p 447
  • Bruno Lewin: "Japanese anthology: from the Nara period to the Edo period ," Otto Harrassowitz Verlag, 1965, p 128
  • Author
  • Poetry
  • Literary scholar
  • Literature (Japanese)
  • Japanese
  • Born in 1861
  • Died in 1903
  • Man
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