Kyōka Izumi
Japanese writer (1873–1939) / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Kyōtarō Izumi (泉 鏡太郎, Izumi Kyōtarō, 4 November 1873 – 7 September 1939), known by his pen name Izumi Kyōka (泉 鏡花, Izumi Kyōka), was a Japanese novelist, writer and kabuki playwright who was active during the prewar period.
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Izumi Kyōka | |
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Born | Kyōtarō Izumi (1873-11-04)4 November 1873 Kanazawa, Ishikawa, Japan |
Died | 7 September 1939(1939-09-07) (aged 65) Tokyo, Japan |
Occupation | Writer |
Genre | Novels, short stories, plays, haiku |
Kyōka's writing differed greatly from that of the naturalist writers who dominated the literary scene at the time. Many of Kyōka's works are surrealist critiques of society.[1] He is best known for a characteristic brand of Romanticism preferring tales of the supernatural heavily influenced by works of the earlier Edo period in Japanese arts and letters, which he tempered with his own personal vision of aesthetics and art in the modern age.
He is also considered one of the supreme stylists in modern Japanese literature, and the difficulty and richness of his prose has been frequently noted by fellow authors and critics.[by whom?] Like Natsume Sōseki and other Japanese authors with pen names, Kyōka is usually known by his pen name rather than his real given name.