Gotō Chūgai Explained

Gotō Chūgai
Native Name:後藤 宙外
Birth Name:Gotō Toranosuke
Birth Date:23 December 1866
Birth Place:Daisen, Akita Japan
Death Place:Aizuwakamatsu, Fukushima Japan
Occupation:essayist, literary critic
Language:Japanese
Genres:-->
Subjects:-->
Notablework:-->
Spouses:-->
Partners:-->

was the pen-name of Gotō Toranosuke, a Japanese essayist, novella writer, and literary critic active from the late Meiji through the early Shōwa periods of Japan. [1]

Biography

Born in the rural Senboku District of Akita prefecture (in what is now the city of Daisen, Gotō graduated from the Tokyo Semmon Gakko (present-day Waseda University). From 1900, he served as editor of the literary magazine Shinshōsetsu ("New Fiction"). Some of the writers who contributed to the magazine during his tenure were members of the Ken'yūsha literary society, including Hirotsu Ryurō, Kyōka Izumi, Shimazaki Toson, Natsume Sōseki and Nagai Kafū. He was strongly critical of the naturalism movement, which began to become popular around that time. His works include a novella, Funikudan (1899), and a collection of essays, Hi shizen shugi (1908).

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Frederic . Louis . Japan Encyclopedia . 1995 . Harvard University Press . 0674017536 . 263.