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On June 24, 1899, Kawabata Yasunari, Japan's first Nobel Prize winner in literature, was born

Today, 126 years ago, on June 24th, 1899 (the 17th day of the fifth lunar month), Kawabata Yasunari, the first Nobel Prize winner in literature in Japan, was born.

In the autumn of 1968, Japan's famous contemporary writer, Quaidō Kan, was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature, the first Nobel Prize winner in Japan.

He is a well-known and beloved Japanese new-sensitive, idealistic writer, who wrote more than a hundred short novels and a large number of accompanying and literary reviews during his lifetime. His work is filled with a strong Japanese ethnic attitude, which encompasses the humble, subtle, sensual feelings of Japanese classical literature and the colorlessness of Oriental Buddhism. He expresses the inner world of Japanese people with rich feelings, sharp feelings and superior artistic skills.

In 1926, the novel describes a twenty-year-old college pre-school student traveling alone to Ibo and meeting a poor dancer who sings. During a few days of traveling together, he fell in love with the dancer and fell in a tragic love. The dancer, Beautiful, was tragic and deeply moved by the youth's heart. Finally, in the public bathroom, when he knew that the dancer was just a naïve, pure and free girl, he felt pure love and sweet beauty in the heart of pure and innocent. The novel story is unforgettable, but delicately describes the psychological activities of the characters and the beautiful scenery of Ibo.

In fact, the protagonist of this novel is the author himself, while reading a high school,川端 travelled alone to Ibo and met a touring dancer. At the age of twenty-three, he fell in love with a 16-year-old girl, in the month before they were going to get married, the girl suddenly came to the letter, disbanded the engagement. This caused川端 to suffer a lifelong unforgettable blow.

In 1933, a group of new artists were introduced to the literature and introduced to the literature. He continued to publish "The Beast", "The Flower's Circle Dance", "The Snow Country" and other novels on the magazine. Among them, "The Snow Country" was the most famous, which began in 1937, and was written for twelve years. The novel revolved around the main character's island village's three northern snow country. The island village was a middle-aged man who was deeply enthusiastic about life when he sat down and saddened the motherland, with nothing to do, and occasionally with western printing to write about western love. When he first came to the snow country, he met the girlfriend of the three master's village - the nineteenth-year-old girl. The beauty of life, the

In 1962, another important work of the Tōtō, “Gatō” came out. The story is based on the joining of twin sisters, Tōtō and Tōtō, and the twisted love between the young Tōtō and their sisters, focusing on the love of the two sisters. The sisters grew up as poor and rich after birth. The sisters grew up as poor, but because of their different lifestyles, they woven a beautiful belt, prepared for Tōtō. Because the sisters were similar, Tōtō mistakenly gave the belt to the sisters. In the truth, the man realized that the fate of Tōtō was unthinkable, and the fate of Tōtō was lonely and lonely. The sisters remembered Tōtōtō, but because of their different

In 1961, Kawabata completed Sleeping Beauty, a masterpiece of his later nihilistic and decadent literature. The work describes a low-class brothel that uses sleeping pills to put some beautiful girls to sleep, and then allows old people to play with them. When the old man is aware of his own aging and young girl's youth, he thinks of life in a dreamlike state and feels spiritual comfort. In his later years, Kawabata showed unconsciousness in thought, pursued static and instant beauty in creation, and described sentimental, decadent emotions and depressed functional enjoyment.

Throughout Kawabata's fifty years of creative practice, his novels all take love as the theme, describing the frustration of love and the infatuation and sadness of unrealized love. Japanese critic Mitsuo Nakamura said: Kawabata described three different types of love in three different periods. The early masterpiece The Dancing Girl of Izu shows the awakening of teenagers' pure love; In the middle period, Snow Country depicts the lust of men and women, and reflects the longing for innocent women; The later works of Mountain Sound and Sleeping Beauty describe the abnormal love psychology of the elderly. For the author, falling in love is a painful experience that never gets a happy ending, and only death can relieve it.

In 1968, he won the Nobel Prize for Literature for his three masterpieces: Snow Country, Ancient Capital and A Thousand Cranes. At the award ceremony in Stockholm, the Nobel Prize Selection Committee pointed out when talking about Kawabata Yasunari's artistic achievements: Kawabata Yasunari, with his typical narrative literature, extraordinarily and keenly expressed the inner essence of Japanese people. " His works have been translated into English, French, German, Italian, Swedish, Finnish and other languages, and his translations are also available in China.

In 1972,川端康成 died at the age of 73.



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17WorldNews[2025.09.27-14:21] 访问:85
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