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         Mishima Yukio:     more books (100)
  1. Spring Snow by Yukio Mishima, 1990-04-14
  2. Confessions of a Mask (New Directions Paperbook) by Yukio Mishima, 1958-01-17
  3. Acts of Worship: Seven Stories by Yukio Mishima, 2002-09-13
  4. The Life and Death of Yukio Mishima by Henry Scott Stokes, 2000-08-08
  5. Five Modern No Plays (Vintage International) by Yukio Mishima, 2009-12-01
  6. Death in Midsummer: And Other Stories by Yukio Mishima, 1966-06
  7. Sun and Steel by Yukio Mishima, 2003-04-11
  8. The Sound of Waves by Yukio Mishima, 1994-10-04
  9. Thirst for Love by Yukio Mishima, 1999-02-22
  10. The Decay of the Angel (Sea of Fertility, Book 4) by Yukio Mishima, 1990-04-14
  11. The Sailor Who Fell From Grace with the Sea by Yukio Mishima, 1994-05-31
  12. Runaway Horses by Yukio Mishima, 1990-04-14
  13. Ba-ra-kei: Ordeal by Roses
  14. Musica / Music (Spanish Edition) by Yukio Mishima, 2010-06-30

1. The Mishima Yukio Cyber Museum
First Edition. The suicide death of mishima yukio, a writer of the Showa era, shocked the world. Two and a half decades have passed since his death.
http://www.vill.yamanakako.yamanashi.jp/bungaku/mishima/index-e.html

2. Mishima Yukio
Essay on the availability in English of the fiction of Yukio Mishima years between 1973 and 1983 it was definitely Yukio Mishima, for he captured my attention in a single in the field, The Availability of Yukio Mishima ( published in Inscape in
http://www.washburn.edu/reference/bridge24/Mishima.html
I say that the strongest literary influence on my whole life has been Shakespeare, of course, but in my early years in graduate school it was Nathaniel Hawthorne, and in the years between 1973 and 1983 it was definitely Yukio Mishima, for he captured my attention in a single evening (in the film version of one of his short stories, Rites of Love and Death ), and then drew me into the study of Japanese literature, which was my primary activity for that ten years, and, during that period, more and more of his work came to be translated into English. So I am offering as my item on Japanese Literature for April, 2000, the first thing I wrote in the field, The Availability of Yukio Mishima (published in Inscape in 1974), which I think has held up pretty well. In my judgment Mishima will stand taller than any twentieth-century American novelist 200 years from now, and I was pleased to see that The East , a magazine I subscribe to, selected him as the most important figure in Japanese literature for the century. I would still be pleased to teach a course in Mishima (as I used to tell my department chairman about the British Literature survey course, "free in the middle of the night")though I would also be willing to teach a course on James Joyce, with whom I have worked much more in the last few years, whom Time Magazine chose as the most important novelist of the century, and who does have a chance of standing taller than Mishima 200 years from now.

3. The Mishima Yukio Cyber Museum
mishima yukio Bungakukan Organizing Committee Members. Questions about mishima yukio (6/28 Open) We welcome questions regarding the writer and his works.
http://www.vill.yamanakako.yamanashi.jp/bungaku/mishima/museum/museum_e.html

4. Mishima Yukio --  Encyclopædia Britannica
MLA style " mishima yukio." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2004. Encyclopædia Britannica Premium Service. APA style mishima yukio. Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved May 2, 2004, from
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=54284

5. Mishima Yukio
mishima yukio (January 14, 1925 November 25, 1970). Life; Translations 1941. This also marked his first use of the pen name mishima yukio. The
http://www.f.waseda.jp/mjewel/jlit/authors_works/modernlit/mishima_yukio.html
Mishima Yukio (January 14, 1925 - November 25, 1970)
Life
Mishima was the modern Japanese author who, at least until the arrival of Murakami Haruki and Yoshimoto Banana, had won the largest readership outside of Japan, at least in part because of the dramatic way he ended his life. A versatile and prolific writer as well as an astute critic (some would rate his criticism higher than his fiction), Mishima seems assured of a reputation as one of Japan's most important postwar writers. Mishima was born in Tokyo as Hiraoka Kimitake. His father, Azusa, was an official in the Ministry of Agriculture; his mother Shizue was the second daughter of a former principal of Kaisei Middle School, Hashi Kenz´. The influence of Mishima's autocratic grandmother, Natsu " who had Mishima live in her room and forbade him to play with other boys " is frequently cited by biographers as the source of Mishima's later deviation from normality. Donald Keene and others, however, also point out rightly that she helped Mishima develop his precocious taste in literature. Throughout his youth Mishima attended the Gakush»in (Peers School), serializing his first important prose work

6. Gaijinitymain
Contains articles on linguistics, photos of current bridges written about by author mishima yukio, plus stories, poems and essays.
http://www.gaijinity.com/
Welcome to gaijinity.com, the Gaijinity, Ltd. Homepage! The goal of Gaijinity, Ltd. is to provide a platform for the promotion of original creative content. At present, Dan Strack is the sole contributor, and it looks like it may just stay that way. WHAT'S NEW... Dan has just finished putting together a photo page ( Hashibungaku no Shashin Tenran: Mishima Yukio "Hashizukushi" ) which presents the bridges that appear in Mishima Yukio's short story, The Seven Bridges (Hashizukushi). Explanations of the pictures are in Japanese. Dan has just published a new academic paper: Theories of Learning in Applied Linguistics: A Neurobiological Perspective . Click on the title to read the article or look over other papers written in English by clicking HERE Dan's most recent paper written in Japanese is Nihon no Hashi to Sekai no Hashi: Yasuda Yojuro to Yanagida Kunio ni okeru Hashi no Isou, while his most recent Japanese Essay is Daigaku ni okeru Jouhou no Kachi . For those who don't read Japanese, check out some of the English Articles already available.

7. The Yukio Mishima Cyber Museum
in Henry Scott Stokes' The Life and Death of Yukio Mishima or (for works not yet published in translation) translated HomePage(Japanese) mishima yukio Cyber Museum
http://www.vill.yamanakako.yamanashi.jp/bungaku/mishima/nenpu/nenpu_e.html

8. Mishima By Fukushima
Fukushima Jirô. mishima yukio Tsurugi to kanbeni (mishima yukio The Sword and Rouge). Tokyo Bungei Shunjû, 1998. A novel (at
http://www.f.waseda.jp/mjewel/jlit/reviews/japanese/fukushima.html
Fukushima Jir´. Mishima Yukio: Tsurugi to kanbeni (Mishima Yukio: The Sword and Rouge). Tokyo: Bungei Shunj», 1998.
Bungakukai (April 1998) and can be found there. The general impression is of a biographical footnote coated with a thick layer of vindictiveness.
The first of the novel's four chapters is set in the immediate aftermath of Mishima's dramatic suicide on November 25, 1970, and dwells upon Fukushima's reaction to the event and his subsequent visit to Mishima's parents to offer his condolences. Fukushima, who had a very difficult childhood, notes similarities and (especially) contrasts between his own upbringing and that of Mishima, taking special pains to emphasize the understanding, elegance, and charm shown by Mishima's mother, Shizue.
The second chapter takes the reader back to 1951, when Fukushima, as a student of Japanese literature at Toyo University, first visited Mishima to learn the true name of the tea shop mentioned in the novel Kinjiki (Forbidden Colors, 1951). Fukushima recalls that he unwittingly caught Mishima on the rebound, the two spending a great deal of time from May to August 1951 in each other's company (including a week together at an inn on the Izu Peninsula). Fukushima then relates the circumstances leading up to their first separation (mainly a lack of romantic attraction to Mishima on Fukushima's part: he remained impotent throughout their relationship, and his sense of the absurdity of his situation caused him to burst into uncontrollable laughter during their final session together in Izu). Juiciest piece of gossip: Mishima preferred his sex frontal (at least during this period). Most memorable scene: Mishima fiddling with the dials of a portable radio at a hotel window trying to find a station with the right music to set the mood for his seduction of Fukushima.

9. Yukio Mishima - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Yukio Mishima. Yukio Mishima (?) (January 14, 1925 November 25, 1970) was a Japanese author and political activist.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yukio_Mishima
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Yukio Mishima
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Yukio Mishima January 14 November 25 ) was a Japanese author and political activist. Born Kimitake Hiraoka , Mishima wrote novels plays essays poems , and a libretto . Mishima is notable for both his nihilistic post-war writing and the circumstances of his suicide Table of contents showTocToggle("show","hide") 1 Life
2 Awards

3 Works

4 Works about Mishima
Life
Mishima was the son of Azusa Hiraoka, deputy director of the Ministry of Fisheries in the Agriculture Ministry, and Shizue Hara. His early childhood was greatly influenced by his grandmother, Natsu. She separated Mishima from his family, and encouraged his interest in Kabuki theatre and in the idea of an elite past. Mishima did well at the elite Peers School , belonging to a literary society there. He was misdiagnosed as having tuberculosis and escaped service during World War II . He graduated from the University of Tokyo in 1947 with a degree in jurisprudence , and worked as an official in the government's Finance Ministry. He resigned his position within a year in order to devote his time to writing. He wrote

10. Yukio Mishima: A Who2 Profile
YUKIO MISHIMA • Writer. Name at birth Kimitake Hiraoka mishima yukio Cyber Museum Online preview to a museum being contructed in Japan,
http://www.who2.com/yukiomishima.html
YUKIO MISHIMA Writer Name at birth: Kimitake Hiraoka Yukio Mishima is one of the most widely-read Japanese authors of the 20th century, due in part to his dramatic suicide in 1970. Born in Tokyo, Mishima studied law and was a civil servant before turning to writing exclusively. Over his career he was incredibly prolific, a writer of novels, short stories, plays and political and literary criticism, beginning in the late 1940s. Nominated for the Nobel Prize three times, his most famous books include Gogo no eiko (1965, translated as The Sailor Who Fell From Grace With the Sea Kinkakuji The Temple of the Golden Pavilion ) and the tetralogy Hojo no umi The Sea of Fertility ). His personal life got just as much attention as his writing: after a 1952 trip to Greece Mishima began a strict regimen of body-building, and he became keen on photographing his chiseled physique in poses reminiscent of the death of the Christian martyr St. Sebastian. He also became obsessed with loyalty to the emperor and formed his own small army, called the Shield Society. On November 25, 1970, he delivered the complete manuscript of the last work in his tetralogy, then proceeded with four followers to the headquarters of the Japanese Self-Defense Force, where he read a "manifesto" and then committed seppuku (ritual disembowelment), after which one of his compatriots chopped his head off. He is considered by many to be one of the greatest Japanese writers of the 20th century, but other critics have dismissed his work as examples of egocentric, nihilistic decadence.

11. MSN Encarta - Mishima Yukio
Translate this page mishima yukio. 1. Présentation. mishima yukio (1925-1970), romancier japonais, auteur de la Confession d’un masque(Kamen no kokuhaku).
http://fr.encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761565967/Mishima_Yukio.html
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Article accessible sur abonnement MSN Encarta Premium : Acc©dez   30 000 articles encyclop©diques avec plus de 12 000 illustrations, un atlas mondial interactif, un guide du Web et une palette compl¨te de ressources et d'outils ©ducatifs. 34,99 € par an (service d’acc¨s   Internet non compris). En savoir plus. Cet article n'est accessible que si vous ªtes abonn©   MSN Encarta Premium. Dans ce cas, connectez-vous en cliquant sur le lien Aller sur MSN Encarta Premium (ci-dessus). Mishima Yukio Pr©sentation Mishima Yukio (1925-1970), romancier japonais, auteur de la Confession d’un masque (Kamen no kokuhaku) € l’aube d’une passion litt©raire Confession d’une esth©tique ©rotique Dramaturgie : entre classique et contemporain Ambigu¯t©, passion, mort et conscience du n©ant La mort du samoura¯ M©dias Encarta vous int©resse ? Abonnez-vous d¨s maintenant et b©n©ficiez de :
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12. MSN Encarta - Résultats De La Recherche - Mishima Yukio
mishima yukio . Page 1 sur 1. *, Réservé aux abonnés MSN Encarta Premium. 1. mishima yukio*.
http://fr.encarta.msn.com/Mishima_Yukio.html
Accueil MSN Mon MSN Hotmail Rechercher ... S'abonner   Encarta Premium Rechercher Encarta R©sultats de la recherche pour "Mishima Yukio" Page sur 1 R©serv© aux abonn©s MSN Encarta Premium. Mishima Yukio Encyclop©die EncartaArticle Mishima Yukio (1925-1970), romancier japonais, auteur de la Confession d’un masque (Kamen no kokuhaku) plan de l'article Pr©sentation € l’aube d’une passion litt©raire Confession d’une esth©tique ©rotique Dramaturgie : entre classique et contemporain ... Yukio Mishima Encyclop©die EncartaImage Confession d'un masque (Yukio Mishima) Encyclop©die EncartaArticle Confession d'un masque (Yukio Mishima) , roman de Yukio Mishima, publi© en 1949 sous le titre Kamen no kokuhaku. japonaise, litt©rature Encyclop©die EncartaArticle Trouv© dans l'article japonaise, litt©rature japonais, th©¢tre Encyclop©die EncartaArticle Trouv© dans l'article japonais, th©¢tre R©serv© aux abonn©s MSN Encarta Premium. Page sur 1
R©sultats provenant de MSN Search The Mishima Yukio Cyber Museum
Site du mus©e d©di©   l'©crivain japonais Mishima Yukio.
http://www.vill.yamanakako.yamanashi.jp/bungaku/mishima/index-e.h

13. MSN Encarta - Dictionary
Encarta Encyclopedia entry.
http://dictionary.msn.com/find/entry.asp?refid=1861678932

14. Mishima Yukio : Everyone's Favorite Homofascist
mishima yukio Everyone s Favorite Homofascist. mishima yukio no Sekai begins with a discussion of Mishima s relation to the rightwing writer Hayashi Fusao.
http://multitudes.samizdat.net/article.php3?id_article=1255

15. Yukio Mishima : Notre Homofasciste Préféré
Translate this page Yukio Mishima notre homofasciste préféré. 1 Yukio Mishima, « Shinfashiizumu-Ron (Sur le nouveau fascisme) », mishima yukio Hyôron Zenshû, vol.
http://multitudes.samizdat.net/article.php3?id_article=1099

16. Yukio Mishima
Yukio Mishima A Legacy of Names for the gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender and queer communities. Click here for more info. The mishima yukio Cyber Museum.
http://www.queertheory.com/histories/m/mishima_yukio.htm

Histories Index

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Elizabeth Marbury

Del Martin
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Sal Mineo

Yukio Mishima
David Mixner

Bob Mizer

Paul Monette

Cherrie Moraga
... Forbidden Colors by Yukio Mishima After the Banquet by Yukio Mishima , Donald Keene (Translator)
Yukio Mishima
Online Resources Texts: Queer Histories Texts: Authors Index Films: Queer History ... Suggest a Name Names Index: A B C D ... Scholars Index The Temple of the Golden Pavilion by Yukio Mishima , Ivan Morris (Translator) A hopeless stutterer, taunted by his schoolmates, Mizoguchi feels utterly alone until he becomes an acolyte at a famous temple in Kyoto. But he quickly becomes obsessed with the temple's beauty, and cannot live in peace as long as it exists. The Merriam-Webster Encyclopedia of Literature Spring Snow (The Sea of Fertility) by Yukio Mishima A love story set in Tokyo in 1912, when the supremacy of the ancient aristocracy is being challenged for the first time by rich provincial families whose wealth make them formidable contenders for political power.

17. Yukio Mishima
Yukio Mishima. Pseudonym of Kimitake Hiraoka (19251970), Japanese novelist, whose central theme is the dichotomy between traditional
http://www.ox.compsoc.net/~simon/simons/historyweb/mishima.html
Yukio Mishima
Pseudonym of Kimitake Hiraoka (1925-1970), Japanese novelist, whose central theme is the dichotomy between traditional Japanese values and the spiritual barrenness of contemporary life. Born in Tokyo, he failed to qualify for military service during World War II and worked in an aircraft factory instead. After the war he studied law and for a short time was employed in the finance ministry. Mishima's first novel, the partly autobiographical Confessions of a Mask (1949; trans. 1958), was widely acclaimed and successful enough to enable its author to become a full-time writer. The Temple of the Golden Pavilion (1956; trans. 1963) portrays a young man obsessed with both religion and beauty; The Sailor Who Fell from Grace with the Sea (1963; trans. 1965) is a gruesome tale of adolescent jealousy; and his four-volume epic The Sea of Fertility (1970; trans. 1972-1975), consisting of Spring Snow, Runaway Horses, The Temple of Dawn, and The Decay of the Angel, is about the transformation of Japan into a modern but sterile society. Mishima, who organized the Tatenokai, a society stressing physical fitness and the martial arts, committed ritual suicide. His death was regarded as his final protest against modern Japanese weakness.

18. Yukio Mishima
Bib 3 Japanese literature that Satoshi likes 4 Yukio Mishima Page 5Gay gate books review 6 mishima yukio Zenshu published by Shinchosha 7 Seppuku
http://www.geocities.co.jp/Berkeley/3508/ymishima.html
Novels of Yukio Mishima
First edited on JANUARY 12, 2000
Second revision on MAY 20, 2001
BIO: Yukio Mishima(1925-70)
Writer of fiction, drama, and essays. MiSHiMA 's suicide on 25 November 1970 brought worldwide attention, and the actions the last hours of his life created widespread concern over a possible revival of Japanese militarism. His appeal for a rearmament had no effect on the government, however, MiSHiMA's reputation rests on his literary accomplishments and not on his politics.
Confession of a mask: "KAMEN-NO-KOKUHAKU" published in July 1949
a summary and comment:
Forbidden Colors : "KINJIKI"
a summary and comment:
There is a handsome guy Yuichi MINAMI . He married, even though he can't love female. He immediately broke into a gay world after the divorce. Then he came across a famous novelist who was old enough to play. The old man was betrayed by women again and again in his younger days. The old man requested Yuichi to revenge on them. Yuichi deceived all the women. And the execution should have finished. The situation wouldn't do right as the old expected to. This novel captures the rich textures and nuances of the Japanese gay society while following a group of queenie in 1950s around SHIJUKU NI-TYO-ME Mecca of ours.

19. Links To Literature: Yukio Mishima
Links to Literature Yukio Mishima. mishima yukio Cyber Museum. Photo, biography, selected bibliography, and information on the museum in Japan.
http://www.linkstoliterature.com/mishima.htm
[Links to Literature: Yukio Mishima] HOME LITERATURE NEWSLETTERS SUBMIT-A-SITE BROKEN LINK ... CONTACT NEW! Think you know literature. Play one of our new literary trivia games. Famous Quotes, Famous First Lines, Famous Last Words, Great Works, and more. To start playing, please visit our Trivia Page GENERAL RESOURCES ONLINE DISCUSSIONS GENERAL RESOURCES NY Times: Yukio Mishima Book reviews and articles by and about the author. [Free registration required] Yukio Mishima Biography, chronology of life and times, selected bibliography with brief summaries, and an explanatory glossary of terms. Mishima Yukio Cyber Museum Photo, biography, selected bibliography, and information on the museum in Japan. Andrew Pothecary's Mishima Yukio site "A site about Yukio Mishima, covering in words and pictures the Japanese author, actor, poet, essayist, film-maker, scriptwriter, military and political extremist, bisexual and more." Pegasos: Yukio Mishima Concise biography and bibliography. Catharton: Yukio Mishima Collection of selected links.

20. Japan Zone :: JapanStore / Books / Mishima Yukio
Books / mishima yukio. The Temple lady My Friend Hitler Yukio Mishima, Hiroaki Sato List Price $20.00 Our Price $14.00. Runaway
http://www.japan-zone.com/amazon/front.php?sid=D74TK8JB80&deptname=Books&catname

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