Onoe Saishu

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Onoe Saishū, 1936

Onoe Saishū ( Japanese 尾 上 柴 舟 , real name: Onoe Hachirō ( 尾 上 八郎 ); born August 20, 1876 in Tsuyama , Okayama Prefecture ; † January 13, 1957 ) was a Japanese tank poet , calligrapher and literary scholar.

Life

The as the third son of a samurai Tsuyama- in Okayama Prefecture hans born Onoe was adopted by the Samurai Onoe and moved with him during a transfer to Tatsuno in the prefecture Hyogo order. he studied at the Imperial University of Tokyo and is subsequently a lecturer at various universities. Including the first Philosophical Institute in Japan (today: Tōyō University ). From 1908 on he taught at the Gakushūin Women's University .

During high school he was a student of Ochiai Naobumi . In 1901 he published translations of Heine's poems and, together with Kaneko Kun'en, an anthology of poems. In contrast to the Japanese romanticism ( 浪漫主義 ) of the poetry magazine Myōjō, he devoted himself to landscape poetry. He wrote columns on poetry for Shinsei magazine and founded the Shazensō Sha group of poets in 1905 , which included Wakayama Bokusui and Maeda Yūgure . In 1937 he became a member of the Japanese Academy of Arts as a calligrapher . Onoe published two volumes of poetry: Nikki no hashi yori (1913) and Shiroki michi ( 白 き 路 , 1914).

source

Individual evidence

  1. 作詞 : 尾 上 八郎 (柴 舟) . Toyo University, accessed December 12, 2016 .
  2. 尾 上 柴 舟 . In: 百科 事 典 マ イ ペ デ ィ ア at kotobank.jp. Retrieved December 12, 2016 (Japanese).