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         Kawabata Yasunari:     more books (100)
  1. Le Maître ou le tournoi de go by Yasunari Kawabata, Sylvie Regnault-Gatier, 1988-01-01
  2. Tristesse et Beauté by Yasunari Kawabata, 2000-01-01
  3. Les Servantes d'auberge by Yasunari Kawabata, Suzanne Rosset, 1993-09-01
  4. La Beauté tôt vouée à se défaire, suivi de "Le Bras" by Yasunari Kawabata, Yukio Mishima, 2003-02-12
  5. Tausend Kraniche. by Yasunari Kawabata, 1999-06-01
  6. House of the Sleeping Beauties and Other Stories by Yasunari Kawabata, 1994
  7. Le Grondement de la montagne by Yasunari Kawabata, Sylvie Regnault-Gatier, 1986-03-01
  8. BEAUTY AND SADNESS by H. HIBBETT (TRANSLATOR) YASUNARI KAWABATA, 1979
  9. Die schlafenden Schönen by Yasunari Kawabata, 2004-08-31
  10. L'Adolescent by Yasunari Kawabata, 1992-10-08
  11. Ein Kirschbaum im Winter. Roman. by Yasunari Kawabata, 1983-01-01
  12. Schönheit und Trauer by Yasunari Kawabata, 2004-07-31
  13. Récits de la paume de la main by Yasunari Kawabata, Anne Bayard-Sakai, et all 2001-01-15
  14. The Master of Go by Yasunari Kawabata, 1980

41. HighBeam Research: ELibrary Search: Results
Gwen Boardman, kawabata yasunari A Critical Introduction 379. that brought Nobel laureate kawabata yasunari (18991972) to prominence, is
http://www.highbeam.com/library/search.asp?FN=AO&refid=ency_refd&search_thesauru

42. Kawabata Yasunari - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
TomFolio.com by Yasunari Kawabata 1. kawabata yasunari, Penaripenari Jepang. First edn. Jakarta, Djambatan, 1985. 35. kawabata yasunari THE MASTER OF GO Publisher KNOPF,NY1972.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yasunari_Kawabata
Kawabata Yasunari
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
(Redirected from Yasunari Kawabata Kawabata Yasunari June 14 April 16 ) was a Japanese novelist who won the Nobel Prize in Literature in Kawabata was orphaned when he was two and soon lost his grandparents also. While still a student at Tokyo Imperial University he joined Yokomitsu Riichi in starting Bungei Jidai The Artistic Age ), a neo- Impressionist journal. Kawabata committed suicide in 1972. Kawabata debuted with Izu no Odoriko ("The Dancer of Izu") in . In appeared his novel Yukiguni ("Snow Country"), a stark tale of a love affair between a Tokyo playboy and a provincial geisha in a remote hot springs town. Yukiguni established Kawabata as one of Japan's foremost authors and became an instant classic. Senbazuru ("Thousand Cranes") continued some of the themes of Yukiguni edit
List of Works
  • Snow Country Yukiguni Senbazuru ("Thousand Cranes", 1949-52) The Sound of the Mountain Yama no oto The Old Capital Koto Beauty and Sadness Utsukushisa to kanashimi to The Master of Go Meijin

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43. Kawabata Yasunari
kawabata yasunari kawabata yasunari, the novelist, was born in Osaka in 1899. He lost one family member after another in his infancy
http://www.city.kamakura.kanagawa.jp/english/bunjin/kawabata_e.htm
Kawabata Yasunari
Kawabata Yasunari, the novelist, was born in Osaka in 1899. He lost one family member after another in his infancy and became an orphan by the age of 15.
While continuing dormitory life, he advanced to the First Higher School and Tokyo Imperial University. With his classmates he launched the 6th series of Shinshicho (New Currents of Thought) in 1921. The story "Shokonsai Ikkei," contributed to the second number, was recognized by Kikuchi Kan and marked his entry into the literary world.
He brought out the magazine "Bungei Jidai" (Literary Age) in 1924 with Yokomitsu Riichi, Kataoka Teppei and Kon Toko and became a representative novelist of the Shinkankaku (New sensibilities) school. By the early stages of the Showa period, he had become a central existence of the Shinko Geijutsuha (New Art school). He released a succession of masterpieces, among them, "Izu no Odoriko" (tr The Izu Dancer) "Yukiguni" (tr Snow Country), "Senba Zuru" (tr Thousand Cranes), "Yama no Oto" (tr The Sound of the Mountain), "Mizu Umi" (Lake) and "Koto" (Ancient Capital).
In 1968 he became the first Japanese to win the Nobel Prize for Literature. In addition to his creative activity, as the chairman of the Japan P.E.N. club, he organized the Tokyo meeting of the International P.E.N. club in 1957 and was nominated to the post of vice president of the world forum. His interests spread far and wide, and he was invited to join fellow Nobel laureate Yukawa Hideki on the Committee of Seven to Appeal for World Peace. He died in 1972 at the age of 72.

44. Magical Realism : Yasunari Kawabata
Yasunari Kawabata. First Japanese novelist, who won the Nobel Prize for Literature. Many of Kawabata s book explore melancholically
http://www.magicalrealism.com/authors/77.html
Magical Realism Home What is Magical Realism? Authors ... News
Yasunari Kawabata
First Japanese novelist, who won the Nobel Prize for Literature. Many of Kawabata's book explore melancholically the place of sex in culture and people's lives. His works combined old Japan's beauty with modernist trends, realism with surrealistic visions.
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  • The Lake
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  • 45. Kawabata, Yasunari (Verf.); Yoshida-Krafft, Barbara (Übers.): Drei Erzählungen
    Translate this page Die in diesem Buch vorgestellten Erzählungen des japanischen Schriftstellers und Nobelpreisträgers kawabata yasunari (1899-1972) sind zwischen 1953 und 1960
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    46. Yasunari Kawabata
    yasunari kawabata was born in Osaka into a prosperous and cultured family. He learned to know loneliness and rootlessness early
    http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/kawabata.htm
    Choose another writer in this calendar: by name:
    A
    B C D ... Z by birthday from the calendar Credits and feedback Yasunari Kawabata (1899-1972) First Japanese novelist, who won the Nobel Prize for Literature (1968). Many of Kawabata's book explore melancholically the place of sex in culture and people's lives. His works combined old Japan's beauty with modernist trends, realism with surrealistic visions. Over the course of his life, Kawabata wrote more than a hundred 'palm-of-the-hand' stories - as the author called them. They were usually two or three pages long, and expressed according to Kawabata the essence of his art. In one of the stories, 'Up in the Tree,' Michiko and Keisuke, both fourth graders, share a secret. Keisuke tells her that his parents quarrel, and his father has another woman. He once climbed a tree in the garden so that his mother couldn't take him and go back to her parents' house. Since then he has been up in the tree a lot. "The "secret" of their being up in the tree had continued for almost two years now. Where the thick trunk branched out near the top, the two could sit comfortably. Michiko, straddling one branch, leaned back against another. There were days when little birds came and days when the wind sang through the pine needles. Although they weren't that high off the ground, these two little lovers felt as if they were in a completely different world, far away from the earth."
    (from 'Up in the Tree') Yasunari Kawabata was born in Osaka into a prosperous and cultured family. He learned to know loneliness and rootlessness early - he was orphaned at age of three, his grandmother died when he was seven, and his only sister when he was nine. The family deaths deprived Kawabata of normal childhood and some critics has seen that these early traumas formed the background for the sense of loss and regret which run through his writing. In 1920 he started his literature studies at Tokyo Imperial University, and graduated in 1924. With a group of young writers, Kawabata founded the journal

    47. Yasunari Kawabata - Biography
    yasunari kawabata Biography. yasunari kawabata, son of a highlycultivated physician, was born in 1899 in Osaka.
    http://www.nobel.se/literature/laureates/1968/kawabata-bio.html
    Yasunari Kawabata , son of a highly-cultivated physician, was born in 1899 in Osaka. After the early death of his parents he was raised in the country by his maternal grandfather and attended the Japanese public school. From 1920 to 1924, Kawabata studied at the Tokyo Imperial University, where he received his degree. He was one of the founders of the publication Bungei Jidai , the medium of a new movement in modern Japanese literature. Kawabata made his debut as a writer with the short story, Izu dancer , published in 1927. After several distinguished works, the novel Snow Country in 1937 secured Kawabata's position as one of the leading authors in Japan. In 1949, the publication of the serials Thousand Cranes and The Sound of the Mountain was commenced. He became a member of the Art Academy of Japan in 1953 and four years later he was appointed chairman of the P.E.N. Club of Japan. At several international congresses Kawabata was the Japanese delegate for this club. The Lake The Sleeping Beauty (1960) and The Old Capital (1962) belong to his later works, and of these novels

    48. Literature 1968
    yasunari kawabata. Japan. yasunari kawabata Biography Nobel Lecture Banquet Speech Documentary Swedish Nobel Stamps Other Resources. prev 1967, 1969 next.
    http://www.nobel.se/literature/laureates/1968/
    The Nobel Prize in Literature 1968
    "for his narrative mastery, which with great sensibility expresses the essence of the Japanese mind" Yasunari Kawabata Japan b. 1899
    d. 1972 The Nobel Prize in Literature 1968
    Presentation Speech
    Yasunari Kawabata
    Biography
    ...
    Other Resources
    The 1968 Prize in:
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    Find a Laureate: SITE FEEDBACK CONTACT TELL A FRIEND
    Last modified March 17, 2004 The Official Web Site of The Nobel Foundation

    49. LESELUST Yasunari Kawabata - Tausend Kraniche *** Literatur Aus Japan - Lesen -
    Rezension von Daniela Ecker in Leselust .
    http://www.die-leselust.de/buch/kawabata_yasunari_kraniche.htm
    LESELUST eigene Meinung schreiben Yasunari Kawabata - Tausend Kraniche
    Roman. dtv, 109 Seiten, ISBN: 3423110805
    Ersch. 1956 unter dem Titel "Sembazuru"
    Aus dem Japanischen 1989 von Sachiko Yatsushiro
    Mehr Literatur aus Japan
    Der Autor:
    Yasunari Kawabata wurde am 11. Juni 1899 als Sohn eines Arztes in Osaka geboren. 1917 - 1924 studierte er in Tokio Anglistik und japanische Literatur. Seine zahlreichen Romane und Erzählungen schildern häufig autobiographisch Begründetes. 1968 erhielt er den Nobelpreis für Literatur. Kawabata starb am 16. April 1972 in Zushi bei Yokohama durch Selbstmord.
    Weitere Titel: Tausend Kraniche / Schönheit und Trauer / Ein Kirschbaum im Winter
    Ein junger Mann wird von der früheren Geliebten seines Vaters zu einer Teezeremonie eingeladen. Er war auch zuvor regelmäßig eingeladen worden, diesen Aufforderungen jedoch nach dem Tod seines Vaters nicht mehr gefolgt.
    Diesmal jedoch wurde er speziell gebeten zu erscheinen - man möchte ihm eine junge Dame vorstellen.

    50. 03/06/96 -- Arts: Snow Country By Yasunari Kawabata
    Snow Country by yasunari kawabata. review by aaron tyler morris There is, however, yasunari kawabata Nobel Prize winner and author of the 1956 novel Snow Country
    http://www.peak.sfu.ca/the-peak/96-2/issue5/kawabata.html
    The Peak, Simon Fraser University's Student Newspaper since 1965, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada V5A 1S6, e-mail: epeak@mail.peak.sfu.ca, phone: (604) 291-3597 fax: (604) 291-3786
    Volume 93, Issue 5 June 3, 1996 Arts
    Snow Country by Yasunari Kawabata
    review by aaron tyler morris Discovering Asian literature is like an awakening, yet very few writers from Asia have managed to penetrate through to the fickle literary tastes of the west. There is, however, Yasunari Kawabata: Nobel Prize winner and author of the 1956 novel Snow Country. This extraordinary novel reveals the life of a dilettante, Shimamura, vacationing in snowy western Japan, and the lives of his two geishas, Komako and Yoko. The three characters search for love, only to discover that they are incapable of such feeling. Like the characters' inability to feel, the narrative is likewise minimal. At times, Kawabata's prose reads more like haiku than a novel. Subtle, yet rich imagery replaces a complex narrative-"insects smaller than moths gathered on the thick white powder of her neck. Some of them died there as Shimamura watched." Thus, what remains in place of a complex narrative is the bare, yet beautiful essentials which exist largely in the characters' conversations, and the haiku-like images which make up their surroundings, and give insight into their characters. The slightest change in mood, the tiny nuances of the atmosphere, are what make up this extraordinary story. Like haiku poetry, each word is essential to the overall meaning and beauty of the novel.

    51. Kawabata, Yasunari Book Talk Forum Frigate
    kawabata, yasunari. Forum Frigate. FAVORITE AUTHORS FLEET. If ye would like to moderate the kawabata, yasunari Forum Frigate, please drop becket@jollyroger.com a line.
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    52. Saarland Online | Www.sol.de
    Buchempfehlung der Saarbr¼cker Zeitung zum 100. Geburtstag des japanischen Nobelpreistr¤gers f¼r Literatur am 11. Juni 1999.
    http://www.sz-newsline.de/buchtips/klassik.htm
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    ePaper SZ ePaper PM Archiv-Suche Termine Anzeigen WebAbo buchen titelseite mitsteigern! schlagzeilen das wetter saarbrücker zeitung pfälzischer merkur maxxiclub clickMe-fotos freizeit-planer sport saar.amateur Saar Shopping sol-shirt-shop branchenführer schlauer umziehen vereine
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    53. Yasunari Kawabata Winner Of The 1968 Nobel Prize In Literature
    yasunari kawabata, a Nobel Prize Laureate in Literature, at the Nobel Prize Internet Archive. yasunari kawabata. 1968 Nobel Laureate
    http://almaz.com/nobel/literature/1968a.html
    Y ASUNARI K AWABATA
    1968 Nobel Laureate in Literature
      for his narrative mastery, which with great sensibility expresses the essence of the Japanese mind.
    Background

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    54. PHONE-SOFT INTERNET-VERZEICHNIS DEUTSCHLAND:KAWABATA, YASUNARI
    kawabata, yasunari. Der Wassergeist / Schnittpunkt zwischen Ost und West Dem japanischen Literaturnobelpreisträger yasunari kawabata zum 100. Geburtstag. Beitrag von Manuela Reichart in BerlinOnline. Tausend Kraniche - Roman "Ein Kirschbaum im Winter" von yasunari kawabata basiert. yasunari kawabata Der Blinde und das Mädchen
    http://www.phs2.net/cwde/L3/o4251d.htm
    TOP-LINK UP-LINK DISCUSSION SEARCH ... HELP KAWABATA, YASUNARI
  • Der Wassergeist / Schnittpunkt zwischen Ost und West - Dem japanischen Literaturnobelpreisträger Yasunari Kawabata zum 100. Geburtstag. Beitrag von Manuela Reichart in BerlinOnline.
  • Tausend Kraniche - Rezension von Daniela Ecker in "Leselust".
  • Yama no oto (Berggrollen) - Info über den Film von Mikio Naruse, der auf dem Roman "Ein Kirschbaum im Winter" von Yasunari Kawabata basiert.
  • Yasunari Kawabata: Der Blinde und das Mädchen - Buchempfehlung der Saarbrücker Zeitung zum 100. Geburtstag des japanischen Nobelpreisträgers für Literatur am 11. Juni 1999.
  • Yasunari Kawabata: Der Blinde und das Mädchen - Neue Handtellergeschichten. Kurzvorstellung des im Hanser Verlag erschienenen Buches. GLEICHE KATEGORIE: INTERNATIONAL
  • 55. Yama No Oto
    Info ¼ber den Film von Mikio Naruse, der auf dem Roman Ein Kirschbaum im Winter von yasunari kawabata basiert.
    http://www.xenix.ch/archiv/mai99/00005.html
    Yama no oto (Berggrollen)
    Mikio Naruse, Japan 1954; 94 Min., Ov/f
    Mit HARA Setsuko, YAMAMURA, So, UEHARA Ken, NAGOAKA Teruko, SUGI Yoko

    C.K. Zyklus:
    Filme in diesem Zyklus:
    Bluebeard's Eighth Wife Gilda Rembetiko Jaws ... xenix.programmation@swix.ch
    Programmtelefon ++41 1 242 04 11 (Keine Reservationen) Last Updated: 22.4.1999 netnet@swix.ch

    56. BerlinOnline: Der Wassergeist / Schnittpunkt Zwischen Ost Und West: Dem Japanisc
    Dem japanischen Literaturnobelpreistr¤ger yasunari kawabata zum 100. Geburtstag. Beitrag von Manuela Reichart in BerlinOnline.
    http://www.BerlinOnline.de/wissen/berliner_zeitung/archiv/1999/0612/magazin/0007
    Berliner Branchen Stadtplan Tickets Club ... :: Berliner Kurier
    Datum: Ressort: Magazin Autor: Manuela Reichart Seite:
    Der Wassergeist
    Schnittpunkt zwischen Ost und West: Dem japanischen Literaturnobelpreisträger Yasunari Kawabata zum 100. Geburtstag
    Als er 1972 Selbstmord beging, waren alle ratlos: Kein Abschiedsbrief, keine Erklärung, kurze Zeit vorher war er mit Freunden zusammengewesen, er hatte Verabredungen, Pläne gehabt. Man fand ihn an einem Sonntag abend in seinem Arbeitsapartment, das der 72jährige erst wenige Monate zuvor gekauft hatte, im benachbarten Sommerbadeort seiner Heimatstadt Kamakura. Yasunari Kawabata brachte sich durch das Einatmen von Leuchtgas um. Die einzelnen Kapitel dieser Familiengeschichte, in der es vor allem um die innere Welt des Protagonisten geht, wurden von 1949 bis 1958 in Zeitschriften veröffentlicht. Wie andere Werke Kawabatas auch, war dies kein Vorabdruck, wie wir ihn kennen, vielmehr entstand der Text von Folge zu Folge, wurde überarbeitet und weitererzählt, bis er schließlich als Buch erschien. Kawabata schrieb keine vorher festgelegte Geschichte, sondern entwikkelte den Stoff über Jahre hinweg aus einem Netzwerk verschiedener kurzer Episoden. In diesen Geschichten die so kurz sind, daß sie auf einen Handteller passen würden geht es um stille Empfindungen und irreale Hoffnungen, es sind Miniaturen, hinter denen sich Lebensentwürfe und Lebenslügen, wehmütige Liebessehnsüchte und erotische Obsessionen verbergen. Ein Mann fährt täglich mit dem Zug und beobachtet dabei ein schönes Schulmädchen. Er denkt über sie nach, stattet die Unbekannte in seiner Phantasie mit Herkunft und Geschichte aus, bis er plötzlich Zeuge wird eines Abschieds zwischen ihr und einem älteren Mädchen. Hinter wenigen Zeilen nur verbirgt der Autor eine innige Liebesgeschichte zwischen diesen beiden. In dem Moment der Trennung erkennt man den dauernden Schmerz, der ihr Leben überschatten wird.

    57. Yasunari Kawabata
    ENTER.
    http://www.yasunarikawabata.cjb.net/
    http://www.geocities.com/tres_madrid/yk/yk1.htm Yasunari Kawabata Yasunari Kawabata Yasunari Kawabata

    58. Yasunari Kawabata-Unofficial Web Page
    Welcome to the yasunari Kawabataunofficial webpage.
    http://www.geocities.com/tres_madrid/yk/ykmain.htm
    Welcome to the Yasunari Kawabata:unofficial webpage
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    59. Yasunari Kawabata-Unofficial Web Page
    Welcome to the yasunari Kawabataunofficial webpage. Biography. a Japanese novelist, born June 11, 1899, in Osaka, and who studied
    http://www.geocities.com/tres_madrid/yk/bio.htm
    Welcome to the Yasunari Kawabata:unofficial webpage
    Biography
    a Japanese novelist, born June 11, 1899, in Osaka, and who studied at Tokyo Imperial University, died April 16, 1972. Considered one of the greatest Japanese novelists and first to receive the Nobel Prize for Literature wayback 1968, he won because they cited that his "narrative mastership, which great sensibility expresses the Japanese mind." In the 1920's he was known to be with a group of young writers known as neosensationists , who used lyricism and impressionnism and favored over the prevalent social realism. He began being a standbearer for European expressionism in Japan. He gradually evolved his own painstaking, episodic style. He sometimes made himself concerned in exploring loneliness, that resulted in a remarkable probing of the feminine mind and other exploits of human sexuality. HIs lyricism was shown, beginning with "The Dancing Girl of Izu" and continued with "Snow Country" , that is all about a self-centered businessman, and is best known among Western readers. Other works include, "Thousand Cranes", "The Sound of the Mountain", "The Master of Go", and "The Old Capital". Ill and depressed he took his life in his own hands in 1972.
    References: 2. Grolier Encyclopedia of Knowledge

    60. Yasunari Kawabata
    Translate this page Home_Page yasunari kawabata (1899-1972), Novelista japonés nacido en Osaka, graduado por la Universidad Imperial de Tokio. En la
    http://www.epdlp.com/kawabata.html
    Yasunari Kawabata
    N ovelista japonés nacido en Osaka, graduado por la Universidad Imperial de Tokio. En la década de los años veinte formó parte de un grupo literario de jóvenes escritores conocido como neosensacionistas, partidarios del lirismo y del impresionismo en lugar del realismo social imperante. Poco a poco fue desarrollando un estilo propio, minucioso y episódico, que se manifiesta en su primera novela, Diario íntimo de mi decimosexto cumpleaños (1925). Con frecuencia se preocupó por la exploración de la soledad y los aspectos que bordean la sexualidad humana. Su novela País de nieve (1947), que trata de un hombre de negocios egocéntrico y su amante geisha, es muy conocida en Occidente. Otras obras suyas son las novelas Mil grullas (1959) y El sonido de la montaña (1970), así como dos volúmenes de relatos que se cuentan entre lo mejor de su obra: La casa de las bellezas durmientes (1961) y Lo bello y lo triste (1965). En 1972 se publicó de forma póstuma la biografía ficticia El maestro de Go , Kawabata fue el primer japonés que ganó el premio Nobel de Literatura en 1968, por su maestría narrativa, que expresa con gran sensibilidad el espíritu japonés. En 1972, enfermo y deprimido, se suicidó. ©

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