Seikichi Fujimori
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Seikichi Fujimori (藤森 成吉 Fujimori Seikichi) (1892 – 1977) was a Japanese novelist, playwright, and political activist.[1] Born in the Nagano prefecture, he gained recognition for the 1914 novel Nami while a student at the University of Tokyo.
Fujimori was a figure of Japan's proletarian literature movement. Among his social realist shingeki plays are Nani ga kanojo o sō saseta ka (What Made Her Do It?), whose 1930 film adaptation became a commercially successful tendency film. In the 1930s, having undergone the forced political conversion known as tenkō, he wrote nonpolitical historical novels and biographies. His subjects included the painter and statesman Watanabe Kazan and the swordsman Musashi Miyamoto[2]. After the end of the Second World War, he joined the Japan Communist Party and co-founded the New Japanese Literature Association.
Bibliography[edit]
- Nami (1914)
- Haritsuke Mozaemon (1926)
- Gisei (1926)
- Nani ga kanojo o sō saseta ka (1927)
- Watanabe Kazan (1935)
- Miyamoto Musashi (1941)
- Kanashiki ai (1955)
References[edit]
- ↑ Japan: an illustrated encyclopedia. Kodansha. 1993. p. 413. ISBN 4-06-931098-3. Search this book on
- ↑ Salmony, Alfred (1942). "Miyamoto Musashi: His Personality and Art". The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism. 1 (5): 59 – via JSTOR.
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