- Nihon SF Taisho Award
-
Nihon SF Taisho Award Awarded for Japanese science fiction Presented by Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of Japan Country Japan First awarded 1980 Currently held by Harmony by Keikaku Itō Official website http://www.sfwj.or.jp/list.html Nihon SF Taishō Award (Japan SF Grand Prize) is a Japanese science fiction award. It has been compared to the Nebula Award as it is given by the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of Japan or SFWJ. The Grand Prize is selected from not only Science Fiction novels, but also various SF movies, animations, and manga.
Winners
- 1st (1980) Taiyō-fu Kouten (Solar Wind Node) by Akira Hori.
- 2nd (1981) Kirikiri-Jin by Hisashi Inoue.
- 3rd (1982) Saigo no Teki (The Last Enemy) by Masaki Yamada.
- 4th (1983) Dōmu by Katsuhiro Ōtomo.
- 5th (1984) Genshi Gari (Fancy-Poem Hunting) by Chiaki Kawamata.
- 6th (1985) Shuto Shōshitsu (Capital City Disappeared) by Sakyō Komatsu.
- 7th (1986) Warai Uchū no Tabi Geinin (Jongleur in Laughing Cosmos) by Musashi Kambe.
- 8th (1987) Teito Monogatari (Empire Capital Saga) by Hiroshi Aramata.
- 9th (1988)
- Misaki Ichiro no Teikō (Registance of Misaki Ichiro) by Ryō Hanmura,
- Kaidanji:Oshikawa Shunrō (Devil of a fellow: Oshikawa Shunrō) by Jun'ya Yokota and Shingo Aizu.
- 10th (1989) Jōgen no Tsuki wo Taberu Shishi (The Lion Eats Increscent Moon) by Baku Yumemakura
- Special Award for Osamu Tezuka.
- 11th (1990) Ad Bird by Makoto Shiina.
- 12th (1991) Salamander Semmetsu (Salamander Omniside) by Shinji Kajio,
- Special Award for Fujio Ishihara.
- 13th (1992) Asa no Gaspard (Gaspard of the Morning) by Yasutaka Tsutsui
- 14th (1993) Venus City by Gorō Masaki
- Special Award for Hisashi Kuroma.
- 15th (1994)
- Sensō wo Enjita Kamigamitachi (Gods Who Played War) by Mariko Ōhara,
- Joseijō Muishiki by Mari Kotani.
- 16th (1995) Kototsubo (Wordpot) by Chohei Kanbayashi
- Special Award to Masahiro Noda.
- 17th (1996) Gamera 2 directed by Shūsuke Kaneko.
- 18th (1997)
- Gamōtei Jiken by Miyuki Miyabe
- Shinseiki Evangelion by Hideaki Anno
- 19th (1998) Brain Valley by Hideaki Sena
- Special Awards to:
- Shinichi Hoshi
- NHK Ningen daigaku "Uchū o kūsō shitekita hitobito" by Masahiro Noda
- Igyō Collection, edited by Masahiko Inoue
- Special Awards to:
- 20th (1999) Chigurisu to Yūfuratesu by Motoko Arai
- Special Award to Ryū Mitsuse
- 21st (2000) Nihon SF Ronsōshi by Takayuki Tatsumi
- 22nd (2001) Kamekun by Yūsaku Kitano
- 23rd (2002)
- Arabia no yoru no shuzoku by Hideo Furukawa
- Kugutsukō by Osamu Makino
- 24th (2003) Marduk Scramble by Tō Ubukata
- 25th (2004) Innocence by Mamoru Oshii
- Special Award to Tetsu Yano
- 26th (2005) Katadorareta chikara by Hirotaka Tobi
- 27th (2006) Barbara Ikai (Otherworld Barbara) by Moto Hagio
- 28th (2007) Hoshi Shinichi 1001wa wo tsukutta hito by Hazuki Saisho
- 29th (2008)
- Shinsekai yori by Yusuke Kishi
- Denno Coil by Mitsuo Iso
- Special Award to Masahiro Noda
- 30th (2009) Harmony by Keikaku Itō
- Special Award to Guin Saga by Kaoru Kurimoto
- 31st (2010)
- Nihon SF Seishinshi by Yasuo Nagayama
- Pengin Haiwei (Penguin Highway) by Tomihiko Morimi
- Special Award to Takumi Shibano and Hisashi Asakura
References
- "日本SF大賞" (in Japanese). Science Fiction Writers of Japan. http://www.sfwj.or.jp/list.html. Retrieved June 1, 2009.
External links
Akutagawa Prize · Animax Taishō · Bungei Prize · Dazai Osamu Prize · Dengeki hp Tanpenshōsetsu Shō · Dengeki Novel Prize · Edogawa Rampo Award · Hayakawa Award · Honkaku Mystery Grand Prize · Izumi Kyōka Prize for Literature · Japan Fantasy Novel Award · Kenzaburō Ōe Prize · Light Novel Award · Mystery Writers of Japan Award · Naoki Prize · Nihon SF Taisho Award · Noma Award for Publishing in Africa · Noma Award for the Translation of Japanese Literature · Noma Literary Prize · Seiun Award · Super Dash Novel Rookie of the Year Award · Tanizaki Prize · Yomiuri Prize · Yukio Mishima Prize
Categories:- Awards established in 1980
- Japanese science fiction
- Science fiction awards by country
- Japanese literary awards
- Japanese language literary awards
- 1980 establishments in Japan
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.