Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Haruo Sato (佐藤 春夫, Satō Haruo, 9 April 1892 – 6 May 1964) was a Japanese novelist and poet active during the Taishō and Shōwa periods of Japan. His works are known for their explorations of melancholy. He won the 4th Yomiuri Prize. Selected works. The House of a Spanish Dog, 西班牙犬の家, 1914.

    • 6 May 1964 (aged 72), Tokyo, Japan
    • 9 April 1892, Shingū, Wakayama, Japan
    • Writer
  2. Sato Haruo. Sato Haruo (1892-1964), nacido en el seno de una familia de médicos en Shingu, prefectura de Wakayama, comenzó a destacar muy pronto como poeta. Tras graduarse de la escuela secundaria en 1910, se mudó a Tokio para estudiar en la Universidad de Keio, que abandonaría sin licenciarse. En 1914, se dio a conocer como escritor de ...

  3. 18 de dic. de 2018 · El tercer relato, « El pájaro demoníaco » (1923), es una especie de fábula mezclada con mito en el que el narrador se centra en los habitantes de Taiwan, colonia japonesa en la época de Satō Haruo. Publicado originalmente en la revista Chuō Kōron, el relato encierra una « crítica paródica a la violencia colonialista «.

  4. 2 de may. de 2024 · Satō Haruo (born April 9, 1892, Shingū, Wakayama prefecture, Japan—died May 6, 1964, Tokyo) was a Japanese poet, novelist, and critic whose fiction is noted for its poetic vision and romantic imagination. Satō came from a family of physicians with scholarly and literary interests.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. Satō Haruo was a modern Japanese writer and poet active from the late Meiji to the mid Shōwa era, roughly from the 1910s until his death in 1964. He worked on a wide range of genres, from the novel, poetry, and drama to literary criticism, essay, and biography.

  6. Sato Haruo has been called one of the most representative writers of the Taisho era (1912-1926), a transitional period following Japan's monumental push to...

  7. The Sick Rose: A Pastoral Elegy. Haruo Satō. University of Hawaii Press, 1993 - Pastoral elegies - 225 pages. The shift in attitudes and concerns that took place in the Taisho period...