Hiroshi Sakagami

Hiroshi Sakagami (坂上 弘, Sakagami Hiroshi, born February 13, 1936) is a noted Japanese author. As of 2009, he is also president of the Japan Writers' Association and director of Keio University Press.

Biography

Early life

Sakagami was born in Tokyo. After moving several times during his school years (Akasaka, Kumamoto City, Kagoshima City), he entered Keio University where he studied formal logic. In 1960 he took a job with Riken Optical Industry (now Ricoh), which he left in 1995 to become an advisor to the Keio University Press.

Career

Sakagami's first novel, published at age 19, was nominated for the 1955 Akutagawa Prize. His subsequent novels have often focused on social groups driven by strong ideologies, including Asa no mura (Village in the Morning, 1966) which describes the collapse of a community based on a theory of chicken breeding as the ideal organisation of society, Keita no sentaku (Keita's Decision, 1998) in which the protagonist joins a religious sect in the mountains, and Nemuran ka na (Should I sleep?, 2004) which describes how a generation devoted to Zen philosophy became entrepreneurs in the Japanese post-war economic miracle.

Awards

Sakagami has received a number of awards for his writings, including the 1991 Yomiuri Prize for Yasashii teihakuchi,[1] the 1992 Noma Literary Prize for Denen fukei, the Chūōkōron Prize for Aru aki no dekigoto (An Incident in Autumn), the New Writer's Prize of the Ministry of Culture, and the Kawabata Prize. In 2008 he became a member of the Japan Art Academy.

Sources

gollark: Yes. To entirely ruin any fragment of humor it may have contained, they answered the question in a technically valid but useless way, like they said.
gollark: I can't see it because I am not a light mode heretic.
gollark: https://images-ext-1.discordapp.net/external/20sihyRyqpNE0sK3CVRjSepKj4OcPD6GIe6q8TZxKvA/https/www.smbc-comics.com/comics/1464966334-20160603.png
gollark: It can't detect video reposts.
gollark: Most AI stuff is just procedural generation based on tons of training data, and analysing correlations. Humor is, seemingly, actually very hard.

References

  1. "読売文学賞" [Yomiuri Prize for Literature] (in Japanese). Yomiuri Shimbun. Retrieved September 26, 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.