Kiwao Nomura

Kiwao Nomura

Kiwao Nomura in February 2012
Born (1951-10-20) 20 October 1951
Saitama Prefecture, Japan
Occupation Poet
Language Japanese
Nationality Japanese
Website
www.kiwao.com/index2.htm

Kiwao Nomura (野村 喜和夫 Nomura Kiwao, born 20 October 1951 in Saitama Prefecture) is a Japanese poet, writer, critic, and lecturer. He is considered one of the driving forces behind contemporary Japanese poetry.[1][2]

Biography

Nomura initially focused on an academic career: he studied Japanese and French literature, and taught for a number of years at various schools in Tokyo, including Meiji University and Waseda University. Since around 2000, however, he has concentrated exclusively on creative work – as a poet, performer, critic, publisher, and organizer of poetry festivals.

Literary style

The work of Nomura “plays with language in radical and diverse ways, employing subtleties of rhythm, semantics, image, gender, punctuation, and repetition, often all within the same short stanza.”[2] Forrest Gander, co-translator of Kiwao Nomura’s poetry, noted in an interview, “What we find in innovative Japanese poetries like Gozo Yoshimasu’s and Kiwao Nomura’s has, as far as I know, no equivalents in contemporary poetry in English. The mix of the philosophical and the whimsical makes for a tone that is absolutely weird to Westerners.”[3] According to Poetry International Web, “In all such experiments, Nomura shows himself to be very much in search of a center of gravity where the almost ritual repetitions and revisitations of captivating sounds and (often erotic) images dissolve of their own accord into the night, darkness, nothingness, the end of a delirium.”[4] Publisher’s Weekly concludes that Nomura’s poems “succeed through astonishment, shock, and disorder, almost in the manner of Kathy Acker or William S. Burroughs.”[5]

Published works

Books of poetry translated in English

Books of poetry in Japanese (a selection)

Collaborative books of poetry

Awards

References

  1. Lauwereyns, Jan; Van Adrichem, Arnoud (2008). "Slang spreekt, slang bijt". DWB (Leuven, Belgium) 153 (5-6): 739–747.
  2. 1 2 Fleischmann, T. "It’s Pigsty I". The Rumpus. Retrieved 17 February 2012.
  3. Morrison, Rusty. "An Interview with Forrest Gander". Omnidawn. Retrieved 17 February 2012.
  4. Lauwereyns, Jan. "Kiwao Nomura". Poetry International Web. Retrieved 17 February 2012.
  5. "Spectacle & Pigsty". Publisher’s Weekly. Retrieved 17 February 2012.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, September 13, 2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.