Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Masaoka Shiki (正岡子規 Masaoka Shiki?, 17 octubre 1867-19 septiembre 1902) fue un poeta, crítico literario y periodista japonés del periodo Meiji. Su verdadero nombre era Masaoka Tsunenori. Nació en la ciudad de Matsuyama (prefectura de Iyo). Pertenecía a una familia humilde de samuráis.

  2. Masaoka Shiki (正岡 子規, October 14, 1867 – September 19, 1902), pen-name of Masaoka Noboru (正岡 升), was a Japanese poet, author, and literary critic in Meiji period Japan. Shiki is regarded as a major figure in the development of modern haiku poetry, credited with writing nearly 20,000 stanzas during his short life.

    • Writer, journalist
    • Masaoka Tsunenao
  3. 26 de feb. de 2022 · Masaoka Shiki (1867-1902) fue el primer poeta importante en aparecer en los años en que se formó la poesía japonesa moderna. Cuando su ambición juvenil de convertirse en un estadista y ayudar a modernizar la sociedad japonesa se vio frustrada debido a la mala salud, decidió modernizar la poesía de su país.

  4. 26 de mar. de 2024 · Masaoka Shiki (born Oct. 14, 1867, Matsuyama, Japan—died Sept. 19, 1902, Tokyo) was a poet, essayist, and critic who revived the haiku and tanka, traditional Japanese poetic forms. Masaoka was born into a samurai (warrior) family. He went to Tokyo to study in 1883 and began to write poetry in 1885.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. 15 de ene. de 2016 · Masaoka Shiki, Ruego a la mariposa (selección, traducción, introducción y notas de Fernando Rodríguez-Izquierdo y Gavala), Gijón, Satori, 2013, 157 páginas. Reseña de la antología poética 'Ruego a la mariposa', publicado por Satori, que reúne algunos de los mejores haikus del haijin Masaoka Shiki.

  6. Masaoka Shiki died in 1902. His works are available in Masaoka Shiki: Selected Poems (1988) translated by Burton Watson and featured in Janine Beichman’s Masaoka Shiki: His Life and Works (2002). A Japanese poet and essayist, Masaoka Shiki was born in 1867 in Matsuyama, Japan.

  7. Today we have tried to paint the contours of the greatest crosscurrent to have affected haiku in the past century — and perhaps ever — the wave of Western realism that flooded literary Japan near the end of the 19th century and the aesthetic of shasei, Masaoka Shikis response to it.