Yasunari Kawabata

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Yasunari Kawabata

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Yasunari Kawabata , 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.

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

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Kawabata, Yasunari

World Encyclopedia | 2005 | © World Encyclopedia 2005, originally published by Oxford University Press 2005. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Kawabata, Yasunari (1899–1972) Japanese novelist. His best-known works are Snow Country (1948), Thousand Cranes (1952) and The Sound of the Mountain (1952). He was awarded the 1968 Nobel Prize for literature.

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Free newspaper and magazine articles

Free Article Kawabata y las manos del corazón.(Primera nieve en el monte Fuji, colección de obras del autor Yasunari Kawabata)
Magazine article from: Proceso; 12/19/2004
Free Article The warm heart of Japan's snow country.
Magazine article from: Contemporary Review; 4/1/1993
Free Article Algunos autores para el invierno. (lecturas).
Magazine article from: Mensaje; 7/1/2003

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Writing as tea ceremony: Kawabata's geido aesthetics.(Japanese novelist Yasunari Kawabata)(Critical Essay)
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Magazine article from: Southeast Review of Asian Studies; 1/1/2008; ; 700+ words ; Yasunari Kawabata, The Old Capital. Translated by J...after his initial 1987 translation of Kawabata's (1899-1972) novel The Old Capital...Japanese read the English translation of Kawabata's classic city-bound saga of Kyoto...
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Magazine article from: School Library Journal; 6/1/2003; ; 582 words ; ...obscure and meaningful. This is not a contradiction but a clue. Yasunari's approach to death and desire, loss and memory--his...Lo bello y lo triste (Beauty and Sadness, Emece, 2002). Yasunari was a main figure in the Japanese neo-sensualist movement...
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Newspaper article from: International Examiner; 4/30/2000; ; 563 words ; ...Imagination FIRST SNOW ON FUJI By Yasunari Kawabata Translated by Michael Emmerich...TALE OF THE BAMBOO CUTTER By Yasunari Kawabata Translated by Donald Keene Illustrated...Kelly Kim I have a confession: Yasunari Kawabata is my favorite writer. He speaks...
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Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 8/24/1988; ; 700+ words ; ...OF-THE-HAND STORIES, by Yasunari Kawabata; translated from the Japanese...Between 1921 and 1972, Yasunari Kawabata, Japan's only literary Nobel...32 WEDBOOK2 Caption: PHOTO Yasunari Kawabata / Some are carefully crafted...
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Magazine article from: The Hudson Review; 10/1/2006; ; 700+ words ; ...by the great Japanese novelist Yasunari Kawabata, who lived from 1899 to 1972...writers of the twentieth century, Kawabata has not been widely read or studied...a kind of Buddhist Pater. Even Kawabata's admirers are sometimes reduced...
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Newspaper article from: The Sunday Telegraph London; 3/16/1997; ; 700+ words ; ...white under the night sky . . . "Snow Country" by Yasunari Kawabata IN THE city of Kanazawa I met a character straight...loved opening lines of Nobel prize-winning author Yasunari Kawabata's novel. For them the words evoke the land buried...
Review: Rashid al-Daif's novel "Dear Mr. Kawabata"
Transcript from: NPR All Things Considered; 8/14/2000; ; 415 words ; ...Lebanese University in Beirut. His novel Dear Mr. Kawabata has just been published in this country in translation...Cheuse has a review. ALAN CHEUSE: Dear Mr. Kawabata --that's Yasunari Kawabata, the Japanese novelist who committed suicide...

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