Funabashi Seiichi

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Seiichi Funabashi

Funabashi Seiichi ( Japanese 舟橋 聖 一 ; also: Funahashi Seiichi ; born December 25, 1904 in Tokyo , † January 13, 1976 in Tokyo) was a Japanese novelist.

Life

Funabashi Seiichi wrote dramas for various magazines while he was still in high school. His work also includes short stories, short stories and novels. He participated as an activist in the Shingeki movement. Inspired by the political and humanitarian commitment of the French writers Gide and Malraux , he founded the literary magazine Kōdō (The Action) . In 1963 he received the Mainichi Art Prize for Aru onna no enkei ( あ る 女 の 遠景 ) .

plant

  • 1934 diving
  • 1938 trees and stones
  • 1945 Shikkaiya Kōichi - (The Dyer Kōichi)
  • 1946 The poison
  • 1947 Gamō - (German thistle wool, first 1964, from English 1978)
  • 1948 Yuki fujin ezu - (The picture of Mrs. Yuki)
  • 1952 The story of the geisha Komatsu
  • 1961 Aru onna no enkei - (Eng. "The girl Tsunako", 1967)
  • 1962 The cat and the spring

Individual evidence

  1. 舟橋 聖 一 . In: デ ジ タ ル 版 日本人 名 大 辞典 + Plus at kotobank.jp. Retrieved May 19, 2013 (Japanese).

literature

  • Oscar Benl (Ed.): A Bell in Fukagawa . Horst Erdmann Verlag, Herrenalb 1964.
  • Marianne Bretschneider (Ed.): Moon on the water . Volk und Welt publishing house, Berlin 1972.