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         Kawabata Yasunari:     more books (100)
  1. Le Lac by Yasunari Kawabata, 1985-06-01
  2. Three Modern Novelists: Soseki, Tanizaki, Kawabata (Kodansha Biographies) by Van C. Gessel, 1993-02
  3. House of the Sleeping Beauties: And Other Stories by Yasunari Kawabata, 2004-02-06
  4. Kawabata Yasunari: Nihon no bigaku (Nihon bungaku kenkyu shiryo shinshu) (Japanese Edition)
  5. Naissance d'un ecrivain: Etude sur Kawabata Yasunari (Bibliotheque de l'Institut des hautes etudes japonaises) (French Edition) by Yuko Brunet, 1982
  6. Pais de nieve/ Snow Country (Spanish Edition) by Yasunari Kawabata, 2008-10-30
  7. La danseuse d'Izu by Yasunari Kawabata, 1984-10-01
  8. LO BELLO Y LO TRISTE by Yasunari Kawabata, 2008
  9. Kyoto by Yasunari Kawabata, 1974
  10. Primera nieve en el monte Fuji/ First Snow on Fuji (Spanish Edition) by Yasunari Kawabata, 2008-03-08
  11. Palm Novel [Japanese Edition] by Yasunari Kawabata, 1971
  12. Loved Ones [Japanese Edition] by Yasunari Kawabata, 1981
  13. Chronique d'Asakusa by Yasunari Kawabata, 1992-03-01
  14. EL RUMOR DE LA MONTAÑA by Yasunari Kawabata, 2007

21. BrothersJudd.com - Review Of Yasunari Kawabata's Thousand Cranes
Prizes) yasunari kawabata (unofficial webpage) -yasunari kawabata (Official nobelsite) -yasunari kawabata 1968 nobel Laureate in Literature (nobel Prize
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Thousand Cranes
Nobel Prize Winners (1968)
Author Info: Yasunari Kawabata
(Translated by Edward G. Seidensticker
Words fail me in the effort to express the superhuman act of will which was required to continue reading this book after the opening scene, wherein a young boy, Kikuji, spies his father's mistress clipping hairs from the birthmark which covers most of her breast. Try shaking that image from your head. At any rate, Kikuji, now a grown man, becomes involved with both another mistress of his now deceased father's and her daughter. Meanwhile, the birthmarked mistress somehow feels free to meddle in his life and tries to set him up with another young woman. All of this is set against the backdrop of the ritual of the ancient Japanese tea ceremony. Eventually, as it must, tragedy strikes as one woman after another commits suicide. Yeah, so? If the word dysfunctional did not exist, it would have to have been invented to describe Kikuji's romantic life. As if wading through your old man's detritus was not bad enough, topping it off by pursuing a mother and daughter would have to be described as begging for trouble. Add to this the fact that none of the characters are terribly likable and that Kikuji is almost completely passive and you've got a book that is hard to fathom or to like. Ultimately, I felt like there were too few suicidesI wanted them all put out of my misery and that birthmark trimming schtick purged from my memory.

22. Argus Aktuella Länkar [www.aktuella.nu]
sve) Kandre, Mare 2 (sve) Karnstedt, Torgny (sve) Katz, Steve (eng) Kaufman, Bob(eng) Kauppinen, Heikki (eng) kawabata, yasunari (nobel 1968) (eng) Kazantzakis
http://www.argus.nu/aktuella/index.php?forfattare=K&visa=forfattarek.php

23. Bigchalk: HomeworkCentral
kawabata; yasunari kawabata Annotated Bibliography KARLFELDT, ERIK AXEL (1931);World Book Online Article on KARLFELDT, ERIK AXEL; Biography; Life works; nobel
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24. First Snow On Fuji By Yasunari Kawabata - Counterpoint
Literary Agency. FIRST SNOW ON FUJI yasunari kawabata, Winner of the1968 nobel Prize for Literature Translated by Michael Emmerich, The
http://www.counterpointpress.com/1582430225.html
"Kawabata lusted for purity; his characters live the contradiction." Boston Globe "First Snow on Fuji is of particular value for those who enjoy Kawabata's elusive and often highly sensual creations . . . Emmerich [is] a very gifted translator . . . All in all, First Snow on Fuji is a moving and beautifully conceived addition to the growing number of translations of this very special Japanese writer, so very much a part of his culture yet so very much a part of this century and the world." Thomas Rimer, The Washington Post Book World "These are intelligent, moving and artful works. They show us a writer of the first rank in his prime . . . It is a lovely and valuable addition to what we have of Kawabata in translation, and, for readers unfamiliar with his work, it will provide an excellent introduction. . . . Emmerich's translation is admirably lucid, unfussy and tonally fitting."
Richard Matthews

25. The Dancing Girl Of Izu By Yasunari Kawabata - Counterpoint
yasunari kawabata is best known for his novels Snow Country, The Sound of the Mountain,and He was the first Japanese writer to be awarded the nobel Prize for
http://www.counterpointpress.com/1887178945.html
"We owe Martin Holman this insight, for in rendering these important early writings into English, it is he who has shown us that the author in his youth was already the mature Yasunari Kawabata." The Japan Times "These stories delineate chance romantic meetings, personal musings, and tragic folk tales, all sharing a repressed eroticism whose spell depends on desire's remaining unconsummated." The Boston Globe "Kawabata lusted for purity; his characters live the contradiction."
The Boston Globe "He employs devices from those long poetic traditions in order to create in modern prose his remarkable effects: juxtaposition of image upon image to open up the depths of feeling lurking behind placid surface reality."
The Washington Post
Yasunari Kawabata
Photo courtesy Orion Literary Agency
THE DANCING GIRL OF IZU
And Other Stories
Yasunari Kawabata
One of the most influential figures in modern Japanese fiction, Yasunari Kawabata is treasured for the intensity of his perception and the compressed elegance of his style. This collection compiles twenty-two stories appearing in English for the first time in book form. In moving selections that sketch the outlines of the young author's life of survivorship, J. Martin Holman's graceful translation captures the delicate nuances of Kawabata's enduring prose.

26. Nuee D Oiseaux Blanc De Kawabata Yasunari Proposé Par Chapitre.com
Translate this page Lauréat 1968 - Reservé à la Guilde des bibliophiles - Précédé de Petite histoirede l'attribution du prix nobel à yasunari kawabata par le Dr Kjell
http://www.chapitre.com/livres/Kawabata-Yasunari/Nuee-d-oiseaux-blanc-17.html

Nuee D Oiseaux Blanc Auteur: Kawabata Yasunari
Vous pouvez acheter ou offrir Nuee D Oiseaux Blanc en livre neuf ou d'occasion (si disponible) Détail du livre: Nuee D Oiseaux Blanc: Collection Prix nobel de littérature - Lauréat 1968 - Reservé à la Guilde des bibliophiles - Précédé de Petite histoire de l'attribution du prix nobel à Yasunari Kawabata par le Dr Kjell Strömberg - Précédé de La vie et l'oeuvre de Yasunari Kawabata par Bunkichi Fujimori - Traduit du japonais par Bunkichi Fujimori - Texte français par Armel Guerne - 8 planches en couleurs h-t de Lucien Davigne - 1 portrait en noir et blanc i-t de Michel Cauvet
In-8-196pp-Cartonnage blanc orné d'un dessin original de Picasso - Titres dorés sur le dos
Editions disponibles: #NOM. Date d'édition: Accueil livres neufs, livres rares, livres anciens, livres d'occasion Le thème principal associé à "Nuee D Oiseaux Blanc" est: LITTERATURE JAPONAISE Ouvrages de Kawabata Yasunari autres que Nuee D Oiseaux Blanc

27. Books By Kawabata, Yasunari
Synopsis An Oriental classic retold by a nobel Prize winner, with Thousand Cranesby yasunari kawabata, Edward G. Seidensticker (Translator), edw Seidensticker.
http://www.animeville.com/books/amazon/kawabata.htm
Books by Kawabata, Yasunari
Winner of the Noble Prize for Literature Beauty and Sadness
by Yasunari Kawabata, Howard S. Hibbett (Translator) List Price:
Our Price:
You Save: $2.20 (20%)
Paperback - (February 1996)
Vintage Books; ISBN: 0679761055 ; Dimensions (in inches): 0.65 x 7.95 x 5.12 Order Beauty and Sadness Today! The Dancing Girl of Izu and Other Stories
by Yasunari Kawabata, J. Martin Holman (Translator) No
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Available List Price:
Our Price: You Save: $2.70 (20%) Paperback - 176 pages Reprint edition (September 1998) Counterpoint Press; ISBN: 1887178945 ; Dimensions (in inches): 0.56 x 8.02 x 5.01 Order The Dancing Girl of Izu and Other Stories Today! Synopsis Influential Japanese novelist Yasunari Kawabata has constructed an autobiography through his fiction with this new collection of stories that parallel major events and themes in his life. In the lyrical prose that is his signature, these 23 tales reflect Kawabata's keen perception, deceptive simplicity, and the deep melancholy that characterizes much of his work. House of the Sleeping Beauties and Other Stories by Yasunari Kawabata, Edward Seidensticker (Translator), Yukio Mishima (Introduction)

28. Resources - Japanese Literature
kawabata yasunari (18991972) Japan’s first literary nobel Prize winner,kawabata yasunari, published more than 140 exceedingly short stories.
http://www.us-japan.org/lit/Yasunari.html
Kawabata Yasunari (1899-1972) Japan’s first literary Nobel Prize winner, Kawabata Yasunari, published more than 140 exceedingly short stories. The author coined the term tanagokoro no shosetsu to describe his works, meaning, “stories that fit into the palm of one’s hand.” Seventy of his short stories have been collected and translated by Lane Dunlop and J. Martin Holman under the title “Palm of the Hand Stories” allowing the West to enter the world of this esteemed and highly recognized author. Kawabata’s body of work is as voluminous as it is diverse. Some stories are well crafted and elegant, others contain biographical content, and others still remain dreamlike and fragmented. There are trick endings, deep symbolism, eerie fables and erotic grotesqueries. Death appears repeatedly among mirrors and masks, and a desire for a love which if realized, would simply dissolve. Though it may be cliché to liken Kawabata’s work to that of a haiku or poetic prose, the author is clearly more comfortable dealing with a form which alludes to implication rather than statement. Kawabata was born in Osaka, one of two children of a physician. At the age of two his father died, one year later his mother passed away, and shortly after that so too did his sister. The young orphaned Kawabata was sent to live with his maternal grandparents. By the age of sixteen both his grandparents had died, leaving the boy completely alone. From a very young age Kawabata was well acquainted with the fragility and transience of human existence.

29. Resources - Japanese Literature
kawabata yasunari Japan's first literary nobel Prize winner, kawabatayasunari, published more than 140 exceedingly short stories.
http://www.us-japan.org/resources-lit.html
Recommended Reading:
Yukio Mishima
At the height of his career, after having achieved international and local fame, considerable wealth and a certain degree of notoriety, Yukio Mishima committed ritual suicide. At the age of 45, Mishima ended his own life by performing a Japanese suicide rite known as seppuku or hari-kiri. Traditionally reserved for the samurai class, it involves self-disembowelment and ends with decapitation. As much has been written about Mishima's gruesome and controversial death as about his literary accomplishments.
Murakami Haruki
Murakami Haruki's novels take the reader into a dislocated slice of post modern Japanese society, minus kimonos, Shinto shrines or any other typical Japanese icon. Despite being set in Japan, he offers no insight into traditional Japanese behaviour and cultural. Instead, Murakami's tales are about anyone, anywhere.
Abe Kobo
Abe Kobo's stories lack the earmark characteristics of postwar Japanese literature, instead the author plays with themes of alienation and homelessness in a postmodern condition. This premise may be attributed to Abe's upbringing in Manchuria during World War II. The writer came to consider himself a man without a home. Reflective of this, Abe's protaganists are often everyday men thrust into unusual circustances, seeking identity against the anonymity of modern society.
Oe Kenzaburo
Oe Kenzaburo's works typically trace two streams of thought, one real and tangible and the other filled with imagery, symbolism and existentialist musings. Many of the author's underlying themes and concepts are not immediately accessible, at times bogged down in sentimentality and literary discourse. To fully appreciate the works of this 1994 Nobel Prize winner it is necessary to consider his history and life experiences.

30. Kawabata Yasunari
kawabata'S UNREQUITED LOVERS. Measured by international reputation, yasunari kawabatais Japan's most distinguished man of letters, her only nobel Prize winner.
http://www.washburn.edu/reference/bridge24/Kawabata.html
This is a paper that I delivered at a professional meeting about twenty years ago, but still seems to me to be a reasonably functional introduction to Kawabata and three of his most available works of fiction. KAWABATA'S UNREQUITED LOVERS In his Nobel Prize speech (translated by Edward Seidensticker as Japan the Beautiful and Myself ), Kawabata definitely does not link himself to European literature; he identifies himself very clearly and very strongly with the Japanese aesthetic tradition, first with the tanka poetry of medieval Zen priests, then with the tea ceremony, calligraphy, flower arranging, landscape gardening, ink painting, ceramic art, and, ultimately, the whole range of spiritual values stemming from the Zen Buddhist discipline developed in Japan in the 11th, 12th, and 13th centuries, but informed by the nature imagery of cherry blossoms, maple leaf, autumn moon, and winter snow derived from the fundamental Shinto values and the classical literature of earlier centuries. Kawabata obviously saw himself as peculiarly Japaneseand took great pride in that fact. Kawabata is frequently praised for the haiku, or lyric, qualities of his prose style, but I leave the analysis of form and style to those with greater linguistic competence. I mean, rather, to consider certain thematic parallels between Kawabata's fiction and the Renaissance sonnetthe male lover-poet as central character, the definition and idealization of the mistress as medium to spiritual experience, the significance of the principle of unrequited love, and the effects of the sublimation of love in refining the experiencein three of Kawabata's best known works of fiction, one early, one mid-career, one late

31. Japanese Literature, Kawabata Yasunari
(1984) PL 726.55 .K39 1984; kawabata yasunari, Beauty and Holman (1988) PL832.A9P35 1988; Japan, the Beautiful, and Myself, 1968 nobel Prize Acceptance
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

32. Yasunari Kawabata
Translate this page Home_Page yasunari kawabata (1899-1972), la biografía ficticia El maestro de Go,kawabata fue el primer japonés que ganó el premio nobel de Literatura en
http://www.epdlp.com/kawabata.html
Yasunari Kawabata
N ovelista japonés nacido en Osaka, graduado por la Universidad Imperial de Tokio. En la década de los años veinte formó parte de un grupo literario de jóvenes escritores conocido como neosensacionistas, partidarios del lirismo y del impresionismo en lugar del realismo social imperante. Poco a poco fue desarrollando un estilo propio, minucioso y episódico, que se manifiesta en su primera novela, Diario íntimo de mi decimosexto cumpleaños (1925). Con frecuencia se preocupó por la exploración de la soledad y los aspectos que bordean la sexualidad humana. Su novela País de nieve (1947), que trata de un hombre de negocios egocéntrico y su amante geisha, es muy conocida en Occidente. Otras obras suyas son las novelas Mil grullas (1959) y El sonido de la montaña (1970), así como dos volúmenes de relatos que se cuentan entre lo mejor de su obra: La casa de las bellezas durmientes (1961) y Lo bello y lo triste (1965). En 1972 se publicó de forma póstuma la biografía ficticia El maestro de Go , Kawabata fue el primer japonés que ganó el premio Nobel de Literatura en 1968, por su maestría narrativa, que expresa con gran sensibilidad el espíritu japonés. En 1972, enfermo y deprimido, se suicidó. ©

33. Yasunari Kawabata @ Catharton Authors
Bored? Meet people at Café Catharton Websites The nobel Prize in Literature1968. yasunari kawabata Bibliography. yasunari kawabata sci.fi. Message Boards
http://www.catharton.com/authors/571.htm
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all of Catharton just Authors Catharton Authors K : Kawabata, Yasunari Yasunari Kawabata Bored? Meet people at Café Catharton Websites: The Nobel Prize in Literature 1968 Yasunari Kawabata Bibliography Yasunari Kawabata [sci.fi] Message Boards: Suggest or Request a board Mailing Lists: Suggest or Request a list Chat Rooms: Suggest or Request a room Can't find what you want here? Try searching Google for Yasunari Kawabata List of Works:
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34. The Casual Spectator: Snow Country: Defrosting Kawabata Yasunari
So this is the 1957 film adaptation of a novella by the Japanese nobel laureateKawabata yasunari (), the first of a whole stack of postwar New
http://www.thecasualspectator.net/films/individual_titles/japan_korea/2002/snow_
TheCasualSpectator.net Snow Country : Defrosting Kawabata Yasunari (Massive spoilers ahead.) So this is the 1957 film adaptation of a novella by the Japanese Nobel laureate Kawabata Yasunari ( ), the first of a whole stack of postwar New Wave films in Japan I have bought, having been impressed by the ultra-surrealist thriller series Tetsuo ) and Kurosawa Akira's ( ) black-and-white motion picture Ikiru And they didn't get the story right. In spite of the label on the disc package assuring me that the director Toyoda Shirou ( ) is regarded as a cinema maestro in Japan, somehow the script simply struck me as a dismal plunder. The original piece of literature is said to have been written like a Noh play, which is difficult to render on screen in lucid dramatic action as it is. But his recreation of the characters, who share few basic traits in common with the novella counterparts besides their first and last names, proves to be the film's undoing. Which depicts Yoko's untouchably gorgeous reflection on the window, which Shimamura, in compliance to the theme of the novella and his own innate nature, prefers to gaze at rather than turning his head to stare straight at the real flesh-and-blood creature. Being in love with Komako is only practicable in theory, for he has never been able to regard her, or anyone for that matter, as real people. They are but fleeting phantoms in his wistfully created imaginary world. It is the abstract unreality that he dwells in, the same way he is a dilettante of the ballet but he has never seen a ballet in his life.

35. Nobel Prize For Literature/Nobelpreis Für Literatur/Nobelprijs Voor Literatuur/
1 .Which works of the nobel laureates have been made into Günter Grass, Knut Hamsun,Gerhart Hauptmann, Ernest Hemingway, yasunari kawabata, Rudyard Kipling
http://httpd.chello.nl/~s.gipman/
Welcome to Nobel Prize for Literature Bureau Stan P.A. Gipman at NIJMEGEN, the Netherlands. The Bureau will send you free information about many aspects of the Nobel Laureates for literature. You can also send a letter with your questions or suggestions to: Mr Stan P.A. Gipman, Postweg 78, 6523 LD NIJMEGEN, the Netherlands tel. +31 (0)24 322 58 42 The Nobel Prize for Literature Bureau has a lot of information and documentation on the 98 Nobel Prize Winners for Literature, 9 women and 89 men. The Nobel Prize for Literature Bureau answers the following questions and other questions you might have, but consults first ............. the sources and also Alfred Nobel ? The Nobel Prize for Literature Bureau Gipman is a non-profit and one-man enterprise; the bureau is not affiliated with the Nobel Foundation or the Swedish Academy.
last update November 1, 2002

36. Links To Literature: Yasunari Kawabata
GENERAL RESOURCES. nobel Prize Literature 1968 yasunari kawabata. Photo,biography, and nobel lecture. yasunari kawabata Unofficial Page.
http://www.linkstoliterature.com/kawabuta.htm
LINKS TO LITERATURE HOME LITERATURE NEWSLETTERS SUGGEST-A-SITE BROKEN LINK ... CONTACT NEW! Enter to win a $100 Amazon.com Gift Certificate simply by referring friends to this site! To begin earning entries in the next drawing, please visit our Refer-A-Friend Page Discount books from Amazon: Beauty and Sadness Snow Country GENERAL RESOURCES BIBLIOGRAPHIES GENERAL RESOURCES Nobel Prize Literature 1968: Yasunari Kawabata Photo, biography, and nobel lecture. Yasunari Kawabata Unofficial Page Biography, short synopsis of selected works, and a message board. Pegasos: Yasunari Kawabata Concise biography and bibliography. BIBLIOGRAPHIES Yasunari Kawabata Annotated Bibliography Translated primary sources and secondary sources. Need a second opinion? Try Search the Web. GoTo Half.com Audible.com Amazon ... eBay

37. Kawabata Yasunari
Translate this page fut récompensée en 1968 par le prix nobel de littérature. Il fut le premier écrivainjaponais à avoir réçu cette distinction. kawabata yasunari se donna
http://perso.wanadoo.fr/eteissier/romans/kawabata/bio.html
Kawabata Yasunari Accueil Biographie Bibliographie
Biographie
L'adolescent
mon amour homosexuel L'adolescent Les Belles Endormies Le Lac
(1954) ou Le Grondement De La Montagne
La Danseuse D'Izu Pays De Neige Souvenirs de Yugashima L'adolescent
L'extraordinaire
ou Le Feu Du Sud
Kawabata Yasunari se maria cinq ans plus tard, en avril 1926.
Naissance D'un Ecrivain. Etude Sur Kawabata Yanusari de Yuko Brunet L'adolescent
L'adolescent Huile
(1921) et

38. Yasunari Kawabata Biography
yasunari kawabata, recipient of the 1968 nobel Prize for Literature,was born in Osaka, Japan. His parents died when he was young
http://oror.essortment.com/yasunarikawabat_ruvq.htm
Yasunari Kawabata biography
Yasunari Kawabata, recipient of the 1968 Nobel Prize for Literature, was born in Osaka, Japan. His parents died when he was young, and he was raised by his grandmother. He was educated at Tokyo Imperial University. He became associated with a group of writers known as neosensationists in the 1920s. Later he became one of the founders of the publication BUNGEI JIDAI. Kawabata's first literary success came with the publication of the 1926 novel IZU NO ODORIKO (THE IZU DANCER). He became internationally known for YUKIGUNI (SNOW COUNTRY) which wa published in 1948. bodyOffer(20410) Yasunari Kawabata committed suicide in Zushi, Japan in 1972. CHRONOLOGY He was born in Osaka, Japan. (June 11) His parents died. He entered Tokyo Imperial University. He graduated from Tokyo Imperial University. JUROKUSAI NO NIKKI IZU NO ODORIKO (THE IZU DANCER); KANJO SOSHOKU ASAKUSA KURENAIDAN He moved to Kamakura. KIN JU (OF BIRDS AD BEASTS) HANA NO WARUTSU JUROKUSAI NO NIKKI; YUKIGUNI (SNOW COUNTRY) SEMBARAZU (THOUSAND CRANES); YAMA NO OTO (THE SOUND OF THE MOUNTAIN)

39. Fiction: Franz Kafka
and cultured family in Osaka, Japan, yasunari kawabata was orphaned In the late 1960skawabata focused his energy on 1968, he was awarded the nobel Prize for
http://www.bedfordstmartins.com/litlinks/fiction/Kawabata.htm
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Yasunari Kawabata
LINKS
The Nobel Foundation: The Nobel Prize in Literature

http://www.nobel.se/literature/laureates/1968/

Click here for transcripts of Kawabata’s 1968 Nobel Lecture and the presentation speech by Anders Österling, Ph.D., of the Swedish Academy. The site also includes a brief biography of Kawabata.
The Izu Dancer (Izu no Odoriko)
http://www.skoob.com/webzine/Kawabata.htm
This page features Edward G. Seidensticker’s translation of The Izu Dancer, originally published in The Atlantic Monthly in 1954. A brief introduction by Ike Ong accompnaies the story.
Links to Literature: Yasunari Kawabata
http://www.linkstoliterature.com/kawabuta.htm

40. Kawabata Yasunari - Prima Neve Sul Fuji
Translate this page 6,71 Euro yasunari kawabata Mondadori Nel suo inconfondibile stile di inarrivabilelimpidezza? kawabata narra gli Premio nobel per la letteratura nel 1968 e
http://www.eracle.it/letteratura/flash_libri/prima_neve.asp
Home Cinema Erotismo Fumetti ... Editori Prima neve sul Fuji
200 pp.
6,71 Euro
YASUNARI KAWABATA
Mondadori Acquista il libro
Gli straordinari racconti inediti in Occidente in cui si esprime tutta la poetica di un maestro della letteratura contemporanea. Nel suo inconfondibile stile di inarrivabile limpidezza‚ Kawabata narra gli intrecci erotico-amorosi di due giovani coppie‚ le vicende di un attore costretto per anni ad assumere un’identità femminile‚ la storia di un tradimento non confessato‚ gli ultimi giorni di uno scrittore che ha scelto il silenzio assoluto‚ il breve reincontro di due amanti di un tempo…
L’autore Premio Nobel per la letteratura nel 1968 e autore di romanzi famosissimi come Mille gru e La casa delle belle addormentate ‚ Kawabata è autore anche di numerosi racconti. Letteratura Erotica Letteratura di Fantascienza Letteratura Horror Poesie ... Scrittrici Cinema Avventura Erotico Fantascienza Guerra ... Attrici Letteratura Erotica Emmanuelle L'Antivergine Erosfera Laure ... Eleanor - Il capolavoro della letteratura erotica del 2000 I sogni di Eracle Adara Michaels Amy Morrow Asia Argento Diane Heidkruger ... Altre Eracle è anche......

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