Noma Hiroshi

Noma Hiroshi

▪ Japanese author
born Feb. 23, 1915, Kōbe, Hyōgo ken [prefecture] Japan
died Jan. 2, 1991, Tokyo

      Japanese novelist who wrote Shinkū chitai (1952; Zone of Emptiness), which is considered to be one of the finest war novels produced after World War II.

      Noma was brought up to succeed his father as head priest of a Buddhist sect, but as a youth he was increasingly drawn to Marxist ideology. He became interested in French Symbolist poetry, showing strong influences of James Joyce, André Gide, and Marcel Proust, and before entering the University in 1935 he studied under the Symbolist poet Takeuchi Katsutarō. He graduated from Kyōto Imperial University in 1938 with a specialty in French literature and was heavily involved in the Kerun, the underground student movement, and the Kansai labour movement. During World War II he was drafted and sent to the Philippines and northern China but later was imprisoned (1943–44), on charges of subversive thought, in Ōsaka Military Prison.

      Noma attracted attention after the war with the novels Kurai e (1946; “Dark Painting”) and Kao no naka no akai tsuki (1947; A Red Moon in Her Face), both of which present a protagonist's conflict between self-image and carnal desire. The novel Kurai e combined the techniques of Symbolism and the Proletarian Literature Movement, using stream-of-consciousness prose. Shinkū chitai conveys a broad view of the Japanese wartime army by tracing the parallel fate of two soldiers—a cultured middle-class idealist and a bewildered peasant youth.

      After 1950 Noma's work employed more straightforward prose. In 1949 he published the first of a multivolume work completed in 1971, Seinen no wa (“Ring of Youth”), which won the Tanizaki Prize in 1971. Other later works include the autobiographical Waga tō wa soko ni tatsu (1961; “My Tower Stands There”), Shinran (1973), and Sayama saiban (1976; “The Sayama Trial”). These works, while conveying a deepening interest in Buddhism, also show Noma's continued concern for social causes. He also wrote many critical essays, including discussions of André Gide and Jean-Paul Sartre.

      Noma joined the Communist Party in 1947 but was expelled in 1964.

* * *


Universalium. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • NOMA HIROSHI — (1915–1991)    Noma Hiroshi was a novelist, critic, and poet born in Kobe to devout Buddhist parents. In 1935, Noma graduated from Kyoto University, where he was interested in French symbolist poetry and took part in antiwar movements. He was… …   Japanese literature and theater

  • Hiroshi Noma — (野間 宏, Noma Hiroshi?, February 23, 1915–January 2, 1991) was a noted Japanese author. Noma was born in Kōbe to a devout Buddhist family, and took up literature in 1932 after meeting the poet Takeuchi Shizuo. In 1935 he enrolled at Kyoto… …   Wikipedia

  • Noma-Literaturpreis — Der Noma Literaturpreis (jap. 野間文芸賞, Noma Bungei Shō) wurde dem letzten Willen von Noma Seiji (1878 1938) entsprechend eingerichtet und nach ihm benannt. Der Literaturpreis wird seit 1941 von der Noma Hōkō Kai, einer Organisation des von Noma… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Noma Literary Prize — Not to be confused with the Noma Literacy Prize Noma Literary Prize Awarded for Literary award Presented by Noma Service Association Country Japan First awarded 1941 The No …   Wikipedia

  • Mainichi-Kulturpreis — Der Mainichi Kulturpreis (jap. 毎日出版文化賞, Mainichi Shuppan Bunka Shō) wird seit 1947 alljährlich vom Verlag Mainichi Shimbun für herausragende kulturelle Leistungen in 4 verschiedenen Kategorien vergeben. Die Preisträger des Kulturpreises werden im …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Literaturgesellschaft Neues Japan — Die Literaturgesellschaft Neues Japan (jap. 新日本文学会, Shin Nihon Bungakukai) war zwischen 1945–2005 ein Verband japanischer Schriftsteller. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Chronik 1.1 Gründung 1.2 Richtlinienzwiste …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • JAPON - La littérature — Dans le domaine des lettres comme en bien d’autres, les Chinois avaient été les initiateurs des Japonais. Avec l’écriture, en effet, ceux ci avaient importé, entre le IVe et le VIIIe siècle, à peu près tous les écrits de ceux là. Mais après une… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Asahi-Preis — Der Asahi Preis (jap. 朝日賞, Asahi shō) ist ein alljährlich vom Medienunternehmen Asahi Shimbun sha vergebener Preis. Er wird in verschiedenen Kategorien an Einzelpersonen wie auch an Gruppen vergeben, die herausragende Leistungen auf dem Gebiet… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Liste japanischer Schriftsteller — Vorbemerkung In der nachfolgenden Liste sind ausschließlich japanische Schriftsteller und Dichter versammelt. Der Begriff Schriftsteller, wie auch der Begriff Literatur werden dabei in einem weiten Sinne verstanden. Als Schriftsteller werden alle …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Tanizaki Prize — The Tanizaki Prize (谷崎潤一郎賞 Tanizaki Jun ichirō Shō ), named in honor of the Japanese novelist Jun ichirō Tanizaki, is one of Japan s most sought after literary awards. It was established in 1965 by the publishing company Chūō Kōronsha Inc. to… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”