Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Nobel - Kawabata Yasunari
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 1     1-20 of 99    1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Kawabata Yasunari:     more books (100)
  1. Snow Country by Yasunari Kawabata, 1996-01-30
  2. Thousand Cranes by Yasunari Kawabata, 1996-11-26
  3. Palm-of-the-Hand Stories by Yasunari Kawabata, 2006-11-14
  4. The Old Capital by Yasunari Kawabata, 2006-01-10
  5. Pays de neige by Yasunari Kawabata, 1996-03-07
  6. The Sound of the Mountain by Yasunari Kawabata, 1996-05-28
  7. Beauty and Sadness by Yasunari Kawabata, 1996-01-30
  8. The Dancing Girl of Izu and Other Stories by Yasunari Kawabata, 1998-08-29
  9. The Lake by Yasunari Kawabata, 2004-07-08
  10. Japan the Beautiful and Myself by Yasunari Kawabata, 1981-09
  11. The Master of Go by Yasunari Kawabata, 1996-05-28
  12. The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter (Kodansha's Illustrated Japanese Classics) by Yasunari Kawabata, 1998-09-16
  13. First Snow on Fuji by Yasunari Kawabata, 2000-11-10
  14. Soundings in Time: The Fictive Art of Yasunari Kawabata (Japan Library) by Roy Starrs, 1998-10-05

1. Yasunari Kawabata
by name A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z by birthday from the calendar. Credits and feedback Yasunari Kawabata (18991972)
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

2. Yasunari Kawabata - Biography
Yasunari Kawabata Biography Yasunari Kawabata, son of a highly-cultivated physician, was born in 1899 in Osaka.
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

3. Yasunari Kawabata Winner Of The 1968 Nobel Prize In Literature
Yasunari Kawabata, a Nobel Prize Laureate in Literature, at the Nobel Prize Internet Archive.
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

4. 03/06/96 Arts Snow Country By Yasunari Kawabata
Snow Country by Yasunari Kawabata review by aaron tyler morris
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

5. Kawabata Yasunari
kawabata yasunari, 1968. UPI/CorbisBettmann When Kawabata accepted the Nobel Prize, he said that in his work he tried to beautify death and to seek
http://www.britannica.com/nobel/micro/315_74.html
Kawabata Yasunari
Kawabata Yasunari, 1968 UPI/Corbis-Bettmann (b. June 11, 1899, O saka, Japand. April 16, 1972, Zushi), Japanese novelist who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1968. His melancholic lyricism echoes an ancient Japanese literary tradition in the modern idiom. The sense of loneliness and preoccupation with death that permeates much of Kawabata's mature writing possibly derives from the loneliness of his childhood (he was orphaned early and lost all near relatives while still in his youth). He graduated from Tokyo Imperial University in 1924 and made his entrance into the literary world with the semiautobiographical Izu no odoriko The Izu Dancer ). It appeared in the journal Bungei jidai ("The Artistic Age"), which he founded with the writer Yokomitsu Riichi; this journal became the organ of the Neosensualist group with which Kawabata was early associated. This school is said to have derived much of its aesthetic from such post-World War I French literary currents as Dadaism and Expressionism. Their influence on Kawabata's novels may be seen in the abrupt transitions between separate brief, lyrical episodes; in imagery that is frequently startling in its mixture of incongruous impressions; and in his juxtaposition of the beautiful and the ugly. These same qualities, however, are present in Japanese prose of the 17th century and in the renga (linked verse) of the 15th century. It is to the latter that Kawabata's fiction seemed to draw nearer in later years.

6. Beauty And Sadness
Yasunari Kawabata Beauty and Sadness (Vintage)
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

7. Additional Reading (from Kawabata Yasunari) --  Encyclopædia Britannica
kawabata yasunari Van C. Gessel, e Three Modern Novelists S omacr; Itilde; hsubdot; ihacek; ibreve;, Esubdot; Ghacek;n ibreve; Ksubdot; Ghacek; ihacek
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?tocId=92329

8. Yasunari Kawabata Annotated Bibliography
YASUNARI KAWABATA BIBLIOGRAPHY. Translated (Primary) Sources. Secondary Sources A G. Secondary Sources H - O. Secondary Sources P - Z
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

9. YASUNARI KAWABATA
The Izu Dancer was first published in 1925 and established Yasunari Kawabata. Following is a partial translation in English of an unfinished work.
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

10. Kawabata Primary Sources
Kawabata, Yasunari. The Master of Go. Translated by Edward Seidensticker. Minature Masterpieces of kawabata yasunari. Translated by James Kirkup and
http://www.otterbein.edu/home/fac/plarchr/kawaprim.htm
PRIMARY SOURCES
Breer, Margaret. "Kawabata Stories." The Japan Interpreter This is a translation of four Kawabata palm of the hand stories, Twenty Years, Snow, Thank You, and Grasshoppers and Crickets. The latter can only be found in this translation. It involves the sexual license of K and Sumiko as they grow up together, as well as K's love for his fellow class mate Umemura. For his indiscretions with Sumiko, K is sent away to school and looses touch with both friends, and when he again meets Umemura later in life, K finds that all was not as it seemed during their youth. Fukuwa, Lorraine. "Dandelions: Translation of Kawabata Yasunari's Last Novel into English with Introduction and Notes." Ph.D. diss, University of Southern California, 1977. *not seen* Kawabata, Yasunari. "Asakusa Kurenaidan." In Introduction to Contemporary Japanese Literature , 334-344. Tokyo: Kokusai Bunka Shinkokai, 1939. A summary of this serialized, incomplete novel set in the Asakusa Park district of Tokyo. This summary describes the dilapidated nature and poverty of this district, while briefly commenting on the work's style. Kawabata, Yasunari.

11. Boston Globe Online / Table Of Contents
that is to say "stories that fit into the palm of one's hand." Between 1921 and 1972, Yasunari Kawabata, Japan's only literary Nobel Prize
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

12. Yasunari Kawabata - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Yasunari Kawabata ( kawabata yasunari, June 14, 1899 April 16, 1972) was a Japanese novelist whose spare, lyrical and subtly shaded prose won him
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yasunari_Kawabata
Yasunari Kawabata
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Yasunari Kawabata Kawabata Yasunari June 14 April 16 ) was a Japanese novelist whose spare, lyrical and subtly shaded prose won him the Nobel Prize for Literature in . He became the first Japanese, and third Asian (after Rabindranath Tagore and Shmuel Yosef Agnon ), to win the award. His works have had broad and lasting appeal, and are still widely read internationally.
Contents
edit
Biographical details
Kawabata was born in Osaka , and was orphaned when he was two; he then lived with his grandparents with his sister. Kawabata's grandmother died when he was seven, his sister when he was 9, and his grandfather when he was fourteen, causing him to move to his mother's hometown. He attended Tokyo Imperial University , graduating in In addition to writing, he was also employed as a reporter, most notably by the Mainichi Shimbun of Osaka and Tokyo . Although he refused to participate in the militaristic fervour accompanying World War II , he was also unimpressed with the political reforms in Japan afterwards. The war was definitely one of the most important influences on him (along with the death of all his family while he was young); he said shortly afterwards that from then on he would only be able to write elegies.

13. Yasunari Kawabata - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
(Redirected from kawabata yasunari). Yasunari Kawabata ( kawabata yasunari, June 14, 1899 April 16, 1972) was a Japanese novelist whose spare,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kawabata_Yasunari
Yasunari Kawabata
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
(Redirected from Kawabata Yasunari Yasunari Kawabata Kawabata Yasunari June 14 April 16 ) was a Japanese novelist whose spare, lyrical and subtly shaded prose won him the Nobel Prize for Literature in . He became the first Japanese, and third Asian (after Rabindranath Tagore and Shmuel Yosef Agnon ), to win the award. His works have had broad and lasting appeal, and are still widely read internationally.
Contents
edit
Biographical details
Kawabata was born in Osaka , and was orphaned when he was two; he then lived with his grandparents with his sister. Kawabata's grandmother died when he was seven, his sister when he was 9, and his grandfather when he was fourteen, causing him to move to his mother's hometown. He attended Tokyo Imperial University , graduating in In addition to writing, he was also employed as a reporter, most notably by the Mainichi Shimbun of Osaka and Tokyo . Although he refused to participate in the militaristic fervour accompanying World War II , he was also unimpressed with the political reforms in Japan afterwards. The war was definitely one of the most important influences on him (along with the death of all his family while he was young); he said shortly afterwards that from then on he would only be able to write elegies.

14. Yasunari Kawabata: Definition And Much More From Answers.com
Ka·wa·ba·ta ( kä w?bä t? ) , Yasunari 1899–1972. Japanese writer whose novels, including Thousand Cranes (1959), often concern alienated, lonely.
http://www.answers.com/topic/yasunari-kawabata
showHide_TellMeAbout2('false'); Business Entertainment Games Health ... More... On this page: Dictionary Encyclopedia Wikipedia Mentioned In Or search: - The Web - Images - News - Blogs - Shopping Yasunari Kawabata Dictionary Ka·wa·ba·ta k¤ wə-b¤ tə Yasunari
Japanese writer whose novels, including Thousand Cranes (1959), often concern alienated, lonely individuals in search of beauty and purity. He won the 1968 Nobel Prize for literature. Encyclopedia Kawabata, Yasunari y¤sÅ«n¤ rē k¤w¤ b¤t¤ ) , 1899–1972, Japanese novelist. His first major work was The Izu Dancer, (1925). He came to be a leader of the school of Japanese writers that propounded a lyrical and impressionistic style, in opposition to the proletarian literature of the 1920s. Kawabata's melancholy novels often treat, in a delicate, oblique fashion, sexual relationships between men and women. For example, Snow Country (tr. 1956), probably his best-known work in the West, depicts the affair of an aging geisha and an insensitive Tokyo businessman. All Kawabata's works are distinguished by a masterful, and frequently arresting, use of imagery. Among his works in English translation are the novels Thousand Cranes (tr. 1959)

15. Kawabata Yasunari
kawabata yasunari. Links to Recommended Online Resources. Creighton University Campus, Local Access kawabata yasunari, Beauty and Sadness, trans.
http://mockingbird.creighton.edu/worldlit/works/kawabata.htm
World Literature Program Kawabata Yasunari WORLD LITERATURE PROGRAM ENGLISH DEPARTMENT CREIGHTON UNIVERSITY
PROGRAM
Overview

Director

Faculty

Authors and Works
...
Contact Info
COURSES World Literature I
World Literature II

Kawabata Yasunari
Links to Recommended Online Resources Creighton University Campus, Local Access Resources Selected Bibliography Audiovisual Resources Links to Recommended Online Resources: Japanese Literature, World Literature Program, Creighton University Creighton University Campus, Local Access Resources: Reinert Alumni Library Collections World Literature Program Library Selected Bibliography ** Keene, Donald, Dawn to the West: Japanese Literature of the Modern Era. (1984) PL 726.55 .K39 1984 Kawabata Yasunari, Beauty and Sadness, trans. Howard Hibbett (1996) PL832.A9 U813 1996 -, Japan, the Beautiful, and Myself, 1968 Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech, trans. Edward Seidensticker (1981) PL832.A9 J3 1981

16. Japanese Literature, Kawabata Yasunari
kawabata yasunari (18991972). Recommended Background Texts. Keene, Donald, Dawn to the West Japanese kawabata yasunari, Beauty and Sadness, trans.
http://mockingbird.creighton.edu/english/worldlit/wldocs/texts/kawabata.htm
Kawabata Yasunari (1899-1972):
Recommended Background Texts:
  • Keene, Donald, Dawn to the West: Japanese Literature of the Modern Era. (1984) PL 726.55 .K39 1984
  • Kawabata Yasunari, Beauty and Sadness , trans. Howard Hibbett (1996) PL832.A9 U813 1996
  • Palm-of-the-Hand Stories
  • Japan, the Beautiful, and Myself , 1968 Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech, trans. Edward Seidensticker (1981) PL832.A9 J3 1981
  • The Izu Dancer and Other Stories , trans. Edward Seidensticker (1974) PL782.E8I97 1974
  • The Master of Go , trans. Edward Seidensticker (1972) PL832.A9 M3
  • The Sound of the Mountain , trans. Edward Seidensticker (1970) PL832.A9Y313 1996
  • , trans. Edward Seidensticker (1969) PL832.A9H68 1980
  • Thousand Cranes , trans. Edward Seidensticker (1959) PL832.A9 S413 1996
  • Snow Country , trans. Edward Seidensticker (1956) PL832.A9 Y813 1996
  • Miyoshi, Masao, Accomplices of Silence: The Modern Japanese Novel
  • Pollack, David, Reading Against Culture: Ideology and Narrative in the Japanese Novel
  • Seidensticker, Edward, This Country, Japan

17. Vitro Nasu » Blog Archive » Kawabata Yasunari - Beauty And Sadness
Yasunari Kawabata was born on June 11, 1899 in Osaka, Japan. A Letter to kawabata yasunari from Directory of Lost Causes by Quentin S Crisp.
http://www.mutanteggplant.com/vitro-nasu/2005/06/11/kawabata-yasunari/
Vitro Nasu
Iconoclastic Incubator Mao There, Mao Here, - June Chang, Hongtu Zhang Him - e.e. cummings + Fibonacci
Kawabata Yasunari - Beauty and Sadness
Yasunari Kawabata was born on June 11, 1899 in Osaka, Japan.
A hand copy of passages from Snow Country
Teaching guide to Snow Country here.
here
) yet Kawabata, against his own counsel, later himself committed suicide.
(When Kawabata won the Nobel prize, Mishima as a fellow Japanese writer concluded that his chance of winning a Nobel prize in his lifetime was nill. The Nobel prize was later awarded to Japanese writer Oe Kenzaburo in 1994)
Donald Richie and Kawabata. (from here
The actual game recreated here . Amazing! Kawabata loved Japanese Ceramics.
Samples of Iga wares.
Samples of Shigaraki wares.
A Letter to Kawabata Yasunari
from Directory of Lost Causes by Quentin S Crisp. A curious piece of Dazai Osamu
This entry was posted on Saturday, June 11th, 2005 at 4:45 pm and is filed under Culture Books Japan . You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0

18. The Master Of Go
The Master of Go , by kawabata yasunari. Perigee; 1981. This is a novel about go, and it s wonderful. It s about the last official match played by Shusai,
http://www.gobooks.info/meijin.html
The Master of Go , by Kawabata Yasunari. Perigee; 1981.
This is a novel about go, and it's wonderful. It's about the last official match played by Shusai, the last of the hereditary Honinbos; his opponent is Kitani Minoru, though he is called `Otake' in the book. The whole book is a report on the match; the moves of the match are given, though with only minimal commentary on them, enough to put them in their dramatic context but without too much detail so that non-go players won't get put off. I'm not very good at describing literature, so I won't try that here other than to say that it's a very moving description of a changing of the guard. Read it, tell your non-go playing friends to read it as well. It's currently available in a handsome Vintage International edition. Look in the fiction section of any good bookstore, in the K's. Here is a picture taken during this match. (It's a JPEG, 108kb.) It's from the book Japanese Game of "Go" , by F. Mihori.

19. Kawabata Yasunari Books And Articles - Research Kawabata Yasunari
kawabata yasunari Scholarly books and articles on kawabata yasunari at Questia, world s largest online library and research service.
http://www.questia.com/library/literature/kawabata-yasunari.jsp

20. KAWABATA YASUNARI Term Papers, Research Papers On KAWABATA YASUNARI And Essays A
Term Papers College term papers - Buy Term Papers - Best college term papers online - Sell term papers.
http://www.academon.com/lib/essay/kawabata-yasunari.html
Home Sell Buy FAQs ... Contact Us
Papers [1-6] of 6
Search results on "KAWABATA YASUNARI":
Term Paper #9782 Add to Cart (You can always remove it later) "Snow Country" by Yasunari Kawabata
A review of the book "Snow Country" by Japanese author, Yasunari Kawabata, focusing on the explicit imagery applied by the author. 1,284 words ( approx. 5.1 pages ), 4 sources, MLA, Click here to show/hide Paper Summary
Abstract
This paper explores the symbolic representation that has been lost or forgotten through translations of the story from Japanese to English. The paper shows how symbolic imagery adds to the plot of the story. A discussion of the book illustrates the use of descriptive language and poignant symbolism employed by the author as tools to emphasize the main theme of unfulfilled love.
From the Paper:
"Yasunari Kawabata novels were set in environments depicting loneliness, emptiness, symbolizing unsatisfied yearning, and transient or unattainable love, with a backdrop of wild and beautiful nature. His novels were written in a free associative and unconventional style, usually over long periods of time. The bulk of 'Snow Country' was published between 1935 and 1937, the period in which it was set, but it was not formally completed until 1947." Term Paper #12815 Add to Cart (You can always remove it later)
1,350 words (

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 1     1-20 of 99    1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

free hit counter