Fukuchi Gen'ichirō

Fukuchi Gen'ichirō (福地 源一郎, May 13, 1841 January 4, 1906) was a Japanese critic and author, also known under the pseudonym Fukuchi Ōchi (福地 桜痴).[1]

Fukuchi Gen'ichirō
福地 源一郎
Fukuchi Gen'ichirō
Born(1841-05-13)May 13, 1841
Nagasaki, Japan
DiedJanuary 4, 1906(1906-01-04) (aged 64)
NationalityJapanese
Other namesFukuchi Ōchi

Biography

Fukuchi Gen'ichirō was born in Nagasaki, Japan. He traveled Europe as a translator, and in 1874, became a main writer for the Tokyo Nichi Nichi Shimbun newspaper. In 1882, he formed the Constitutional Imperial Rule Party.

gollark: Touchscreens are to some extent the enemy of mankind. However, due to financial/phone-market constraints I have not been able to attain a phone with a hardware keyboard.
gollark: I would discriminate against all people who didn't discriminate against themselves.
gollark: `internal/support` is actually *not* magically specialcased in; rather, I have a channel on one of the secret ABR operations servers which is linked to that.
gollark: ++tel unlink internal support
gollark: ++tel link internal support

References

  1. Huffman, James L. (1980). Politics of the Meiji Press: The Life of Fukuchi Genʼichirō. University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 9780824806798.
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