- Kiyoteru Hanada
Infobox Writer
name = Kiyoteru Hanada
caption = Kiyoteru Hanada
birthdate =29 March 1909
birthplace = Fukuoka,Japan
deathdate =23 September 1974
deathplace =
occupation = writer
genre = literary criticism, essays, anime
movement =
notableworks =
influences =
influenced = nihongo|Hanada Kiyoteru|花田清輝| |extra=29 March 1909 -23 September 1974 was aliterary critic , essayist andanime screenwriter inShowa period Japan .Biography
Hanada was born in
Fukuoka prefecture ), and was a graduate ofKyoto Imperial University . He moved toTokyo and became ajournalist for the "Gunji Kogyo Shimbun", a pro-government military-industrial economic newspaper. He was initially attracted the Japanese fascist movement promoted byNakano Seigō .However, during
World War II , he defied thePeace Preservation Law s, and published numerous essays that were highly critical of the government, and the growth ofJapanese militarism in theliterary magazine "Bunka Soshiki", which he founded in 1939.After World War II, he contributed works to the literary magazine "
Kindai Bungei ," and published a book ofliterary criticism , "Fukkoku no seishin", a collection of essays on various writers, includingDante andCervantes , in 1946. As a leading member of the "Shin-Nihon Bungakukai" he helped promote the works of theThe First Generation of Postwar Writers .He was very interested in the growth of Japanese radio drama and
television , and played a role in the development of integrated audio-visual art. In politics, Hanada was a devoutMarxist and active member of theJapan Communist Party , and strongly believed that art should serve politics.Hanada was a founder of "Yoru no Kai" ("The Night Society") and a theoretical leader of
avant-garde arts in Japan after World War II. He favored the avant-garde artistsOkamoto Taro andAbe Kobo . He was executive adviser of Sinzenbisha, which published Abe Kobo's first novel, "For the Signpost at the End of the Road", on his recommendation. Hanada developed a philosophy which he coined "Mineralism" ("Kobutushugi"), which combinedmaterialism with a sense of values. Contemporaries regarded Abe as a faithful pupil of Hanada's way of thinking, and in turn, Abe was inspired by a number of Hanada's essays in his work.Hanada died of a
cerebral hemorrhage , and his grave is located in Matsudo city,Chiba prefecture .ee also
*
Radio drama in Japan
*List of Japanese authors References
* Hanada, Kiyoteru, "Hanada Kiyoteru", Kokusho Kankokai (1994). ISBN 4336032394 (Japanese)
* Sekine, Hiroshi. "Hanada Kiyoteru: Nijisseiki no kodokusha". Riburopoto (1987). ISBN 4845702886 (Japanese)
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