Kenji Nakagami

Kenji Nakagami

Kenji Nakagami (中上 健次 Nakagami Kenji, August 2, 1946 - August 12, 1992) was a noted Japanese writer, critic, and poet of buraku ancestry. Nakagami died from kidney cancer in 1992 at the age of 46.

Contents

Life

Born in the city of Shingū in Wakayama Prefecture, Japan, Nakagami was of burakumin ancestry. He was the first member of his village to be educated under the new compulsory education system “people thought that I was very bright because I could read my own name”. He moved to Tokyo age 19 in 1965, took on various manual handling jobs including a baggage handler at Tokyo airport, which also allowed him to continue his passions of jazz and writing.

In June 2006:
"A poem card (shikishi) on which novelist Nakagami Kenji inscribed an original haiku has been found in the possession of haiku poet Ibaraki Kazuo of Nara Prefecture. The haiku was composed on June 3, 1990, at a party after a lecture given by Nosaka Akiyuki in the city of Shingū, Nara, to commemorate the founding of Kumano University. The poem reads Akiyuki ga / kiku gen no koe / natsu fuyō (Akiyuki / listening to phantom-like voices-- / a summer cotton rose)."

Works

Many of his works are set in the Kumano region of the Kii Peninsula where he grew up under difficult circumstances. When Nakagami won the Akutagawa Prize in 1975 for The Cape (岬 Misaki), he became the first author born in the post-war period to win this prize. He is considered one of the most important postwar writers in Japan, and one of the only of prominence to reveal the dark side of a racist Japanese society. A number of Nakagami's short stories have been translated into English and other languages, including The Cape and Snakelust (蛇淫 Ja'in). He also won the Mainichi Publishing Culture Award for his yet untranslated story Karekinada (枯木灘 The Sea of Withered Trees).

Major works available in English Language Translation

  • Karlsson, Mats (2001), The Kumano Saga of Nakagami Kenji, Stockholm: Stockholms Universitet.
  • Nakagami, Kenji (1984), “The Immortal” (trans. Harbison, Mark) in Gessel, Van C. & Matsumoto, Tomone (eds.) (1985), The Showa Anthology – Modern Japanese Short Stories, New York: Kodansha International. ISBN 4770017081
  • Rankin, Andrew (trans., ed.)(1999), Snakelust, Tokyo: Kodansha. ISBN 4770023545
    • -- (containing “The Mountain Ascetic”, “The Wind and the Light”, “Snakelust”, “Makeup”, “Crimson Waterfall”, “A Tale of a Demon” and “Gravity's Capital”)
  • Zimmerman, Eve (trans., ed.)(1999), The Cape and Other Stories from the Japanese Ghetto, Berkeley California: Stone Bridge Press. ISBN 1880656396
    • -- (containing “The Cape”, “House on Fire” and “Red Hair”)

Sources

Small biography Small biography in French



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  • Kenji Nakagami — Nakagami Kenji (jap. 中上 健次, eigentlich Nakaue Kenji (中上健次); * 2. August 1946 in Shingū in der Präfektur Wakayama; † 12. August 1992 in Nachikatsuura im Landkreis Higashimuro gun ebenfalls Präfektur Wakayama) war ein japanischer Schriftsteller.… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Kenji Nakagami — Activités écrivain Naissance 2 août 1946 Wakayama,  Japon Décès 12 août …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Nakagami — ist der Name von: Kenji Nakagami (1946 1992), japanischer Schriftsteller Takaaki Nakagami, japanischer Motorradrennfahrer Nakagami bezeichnet außerdem: den japanischen Landkreis Nakagami gun Diese Seite ist eine Begri …   Deutsch Wikipedia

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  • NAKAGAMI KENJI — (1946–1992)    Nakagami Kenji was a writer, critic, and poet of burakumin ancestry who wrote his first novels while working manual labor at Tokyo’s Haneda Airport. Nakagami won the Akutagawa Ryunosuke Prize for Misaki (1975; tr. The Cape, 1999),… …   Japanese literature and theater

  • Nakagami Kenji — ▪ Japanese writer born Aug. 2, 1946, Shingū, Wakayama prefecture, Japan died Aug. 12, 1992, Wakayama prefecture       prolific Japanese novelist whose writing was deeply influenced by his upbringing in a burakumin family.       Nakagami was a… …   Universalium

  • literature — /lit euhr euh cheuhr, choor , li treuh /, n. 1. writings in which expression and form, in connection with ideas of permanent and universal interest, are characteristic or essential features, as poetry, novels, history, biography, and essays. 2.… …   Universalium

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