Ryūichi Tamura

Ryūichi Tamura

Tamura Ryūichi
Born 18 March 1923(1923-03-18)
Tokyo Japan
Died 26 August 1998(1998-08-26) (aged 75)
Kamakura, Kanagawa, Japan
Occupation Poet, Essayist
Genres Poetry

Ryūichi Tamura (田村隆一 Tamura Ryūichi?, 18 March 1923—26 August 1998) was a Japanese poet, essayist and translator of English language novels and poetry who was active during the Showa period of Japan.

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Biography

Tamura was born in what is now Sugamo, Tokyo, and was a graduate of the Literature Department of Meiji University, where he met a group of young poets interested in modernism. He was drafted into the Imperial Japanese Navy in 1943, and although he did not see combat, the fact that many of his friends died in the war left him psychologically scarred.

In 1947, after World War II, he revived the literary magazine Arechi ("The Waste Land"), with his surviving school friends, and became an important figure in post-war modern Japanese poetry.

His first poetry anthology, Yosen no hi no yoru ("Four Thousand Days and Nights", 1956), introduced a hard tone to modern Japanese poetry, using paradoxes, metaphors, and sharp imagery to describe the sense of dislocation and crisis experienced by people who had suffered through the rapid modernization of Japan and the destruction of World War II. With the publication of Kotoba no nai sekai ("World Without Words", 1962), he was established as a major poet. He spent five months at the University of Iowa's International Writing Program in 1967-68 as Guest Poet. Later, he traveled to England, Scotland and India. These travel experiences filled another twenty eight volumes of poetry.

Tamura was awarded the 54th Japan Academy of Arts Award for Poetry in 1998. He died of esophageal cancer later that same year.

Bibliography

Publications in Japan

External links

References