Kon Tōkō

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Kon Tōkō, 1960

Kon Tōkō ( Japanese 今 東 光 ; born March 25, 1898 in Yokohama ; † September 19, 1977 ) was a Japanese writer and politician .

The older brother of the writer Kon Hidemi initially belonged to the proletarian literary movement before he became a Buddhist monk in 1930. He reflected on this biographical break in the novel Ogin-sama ( お 吟 さ ま ; 1956), for which he received the Naoki Prize . Other important works were Shundei Nishō ( 春泥 尼 抄 ; 1957) and Akumyō ( 悪 名 ; 1961). Many of his novels were also made into films.

In 1968 he was elected to the Sangiin , the upper house of the Japanese parliament, for the Liberal Democratic Party , receiving over one million votes in the national constituency and finishing in fourth place.

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Individual evidence

  1. JANJAN, The Senkyo: Sangiin election 1968, national constituency ( Memento of November 5, 2008 in the Internet Archive )