Agata Hikari Explained

Agata Hikari was a Japanese novelist and translator. She won many awards throughout her career, but was best known for her Noma Literary Prize-winning novel .

Biography

Hikari was born Kazue Asai in Tokyo, Japan on January 25, 1943.[1] Her father was a police officer.[2] She attended Waseda University, but dropped out and became a copywriter. After fifteen years of marriage, she divorced and began writing fiction in 1982. Hikari also worked as a translator.

Hikari's first publication was, a novel which won the in 1982. Her next few works,,, and were all runners-up for the Akutagawa Prize.[3] Uhoho Tankentai was adapted into the film House of Wedlock. Her 1986 won the Noma Literary Prize. Her 1988 was nominated for the Yamamoto Shūgorō Prize. Many of her works were also nominated for other awards. Her works frequently included themes of divorce, family relationships, and life as a woman.[4]

Hikari died on September 6, 1992, of stomach cancer.

Selected works

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 20世紀日本人名事典,367日誕生日大事典 . 干刈 あがたとは . 2022-11-08 . コトバンク . ja.
  2. Book: Schierbeck, Sachiko Shibata . Japanese women novelists in the 20th century : 104 biographies, 1900-1993 . 1994 . Museum Tusculanum Press . Marlene R. Edelstein . 87-7289-268-4 . [Copenhagen] . 32348453.
  3. Web site: 干刈あがた(ひかり あがた)-芥川賞候補作家|芥川賞のすべて・のようなもの . 2022-11-08 . prizesworld.com.
  4. 水田 . 恵 . June 30, 1988 . 干刈あがたの作品に見る家族像 : 男と女,そして子供と老人をめぐる関係 . 日本文學誌要 . 39 . 16-35.