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DB: BASE de DATOS, Biblioteca del Centro Cultural de la Embajada de Japon
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Created: 2010/07/25 11:21:40 JSTLastUpdate:2021/07/16 23:39:31 JST
RUBRO LITERATURA en INGLES
TITULO Ten Nights of Dream, Hearing Things, The Heredity of Taste (š)
AUTOR Sooseki Natsume
EDITORIAL Tuttle
ISBN 4-8053-0658-0
IDIOMA INGLES
CODIGO INTERNO NI-0513
NOTA (š)(Translated by Aiko Itoo and Graeme Wilson)^@Sooseki NatsumeLs prolific production ranged from his early humor and satire to the profound psychological and philosophical insight of his maturity. The three short works contained in this volume --compounds of bufoonery and seriousness-- catch Sooseki at the crossroads in his mind, beginning to reject the lighter poetic and romantic elements for a more prosaic and realistic style.^@They are among SoosekiLs best, and brilliantly display the variety of his temperament and thought, the richness of his humor, and the sureness of his satirical touch. LTen Nights of DreamL comprises a collection of ten short stories of dreams. Couched in a surrealistic atmosphere, they disclose the essence of SoosekiLs inner uneasiness. LHearing ThingsL and LThe Heredity of TasteL are fantasticated tales of Japanese life in the early 1900s. Together, these masterpieces of the art of fiction reveal the attitudes of a major writer at a turning point in his career.^@ŸSooseki Natsume (1867-1916) is widely considered the foremost novelist of the Meiji period (1868-1914). After graduating from Tokyo Imperial University in 1893, Sooseki taught high school before spending two years in England on a Japanese government scholarship. He returned to lecture in English literature at the university. Numerous nervous disorders forced him to give up teaching in 1908 and he became a full-time writer for the Asahi Simbun. In addition to fourteen novels, Sooseki wrote haiku, poems in the Chinese style, academic papers on literary theory, essays, autobiographical sketches, and fairy tales.^@Aiko Itoo was born and educated in Tokyo. From 1942 to 1953, she worked as a translator and broadcaster with the BBC, in 1949 becoming the London correspondent for the Asahi Shimbun. In 1952, she joined the staff of the newly established LJapan QuarterlyL. Her translating activities extended beyond journalism into the fields of film, radio, theater, and literature.^@Graeme Wilson was born in London and educated in England and Germany. He served as British Civil Aviation Representative in the Far East following World War II. While a member of the P.E.N. Club of Japan, he translated and published a considerable body of ancient and modern Asian poetry, including Sakutaro HagiwaraLs modern poems in LFace at the Bottom of the World and Other Poems (1969)L. With Ikudo Atsumi, he published LThree Contemporary Japanese Poets (1972).L^@¥TABLE OF CONTENTS^@œIntroduction^@œTen Nights of Dream[–²\–é]^@œHearing Things[‹Õ‚Ì‚»‚特]^@œThe Heredity of Taste[Žï–¡‚̈â“`]^)

   

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