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Hasegawa haller Kaitaro Hasegawa Hasegawa kite modifier Hasegawa haller (","datePublished":"2019-10-26","dateModified":"2019-10-26","author":{"@type":"Person","@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/all2en\/wiki32\/author\/lordneo\/#Person","name":"lordneo","url":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/all2en\/wiki32\/author\/lordneo\/","image":{"@type":"ImageObject","@id":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/44a4cee54c4c053e967fe3e7d054edd4?s=96&d=mm&r=g","url":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/44a4cee54c4c053e967fe3e7d054edd4?s=96&d=mm&r=g","height":96,"width":96}},"publisher":{"@type":"Organization","name":"Enzyklop\u00e4die","logo":{"@type":"ImageObject","@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/wiki4\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/08\/download.jpg","url":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/wiki4\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/08\/download.jpg","width":600,"height":60}},"image":{"@type":"ImageObject","@id":"https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/thumb\/4\/43\/Hayashi_Fubo.jpg\/220px-Hayashi_Fubo.jpg","url":"https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/thumb\/4\/43\/Hayashi_Fubo.jpg\/220px-Hayashi_Fubo.jpg","height":"262","width":"220"},"url":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/all2en\/wiki32\/hasegawa-hasegawa-wikipedia\/","wordCount":1433,"articleBody":"A wikipedia article, free l’encyclop\u00e9i. For homonymous articles, see Hasegawa. Hasegawa haller Kaitaro Hasegawa Hasegawa kite modifier Hasegawa haller ( Kaitaro Hasegawa , Hasegawa kite ? ) , January 17, 1900 – June 29, 1935 , is a Japanese novelist from the start of the Sh\u014dwa era. He writes under three different pseudonyms, each with a unique personality, and caused a sensation with his fiction works, his tests and his translations. He signed works under the pseudonyms TANI J\u014dJI , Hayashi Fub\u014d And Maki ITSUMA . Born on the island of Sado in the prefecture of Niigata, Hasegawa is the eldest of an intellectual siblings: the painter and writer Hasegawa Rinjir\u014d, the writers Hasegawa Shun and Hasegawa Shir\u014d. His father is a journalist and settles in Hakodate on the island of Hokkaid\u014d where Kaitar\u014d is exposed to an early age to a cosmopolitan environment with many foreign influences. He was accepted at Meiji University in Tokyo in 1917. During his stay in the capital, he met the anarchist \u014dsugi Sakae. Once graduated, he embarked in August 1920 For the United States on steam KATORI MARU from the Japanese Y\u016bsen. He must integrate the Oberlin College into Ohio, but from November 1920 , he decides to leave school life and travel everywhere in the United States by taking notes on his experiences. He leads a life of almost vagrancy in the Midwest and New York. In 1924, he returned to Japan on a cargo, via South America, Australia and Dalian in Guandong, from where he returned to Japan via occupied Korea. He intends to return to the United States but is denied a visa because of the more restrictive American immigration rules, and decides to stay in Japan to try his luck as a writer. Shortly after his return to Japan in 1924, Hasegawa created the name of Plume TANI J\u014dJI ( Tani Shi ? ) with which he publishes news in the literary review Shinseinen ( “Modern man” ) from 1925. In 1926, he married Kazuko Katori, English translator. Due to lack of money, the couple lives in a room rented in a small temple in the Zaimokuza district of Kamakura, while Hasegawa works as a lecturer at the Near School of the Women of Kamakura. However, his efforts as an author are crowned with success, in particular his new American news often imprints of humor, called US US mono (“American JAP accounts”) and which often highlight the difficulties experienced by Japanese immigrants in the United States. The first volume of this series, TEKISASU MUSHUKU (\u00ab Homeless in Texas ), Was published in 1929. Hasegawa also writes under the name of Plume Hayashi Fub\u014d ( Not forgotten ? ) historical semi-romans that appear in soap opera in the TOKYO NICHI NICHI SHINBUN and the Mainichi SHINBUN of Osaka. In SHIMPAN OOKA SEIDAN (1927\u20131928). Its main protagonist is Tange Sazen , a borne, super-chopped penguin. Immediate success of bookstores, the character was quickly adapted to the cinema and four competing studios simultaneously bring Hasegawa stories to the screen from 1928. In 1928, the CHO Tongoon Refer to a trip around the world of just over a year for Hasegawa and his wife in exchange for tests and stories located at different stages of their journey. The couple visits fourteen countries. During this trip to Europe, his wife also writes articles on London and Paris which are published in the literary review for women FUJIN K\u014dRON ( “Women’s review” ). He published in 1929 a compilation of his articles published during his stay abroad in 1929: Odoru chihisen (The dancing horizon). On his return, Hasegawa more often uses the name of pen Maki ITSUMA ( Pested horse ? ) To publish non-fiction accounts on major Western various facts and stories describing Sophisticated Japanese urban life, which earned it great success with Japanese readers. At the same time, he was offered a continuation to the Imperial Hotel in Tokyo, but in 1929, he moved to Kamakura where he lived until his death in 1935, of acute bronchial asthma. His grave is at the My\u014dhon-ji temple in Kamakura. Chronicles of a Japanese tripler in America , translated from the Japanese and presented by G\u00e9rald Peloux, Les Belles Lettres, 2019. Bibliography [ modifier | Modifier and code ] Campbell, Alan. Japan: An Illustrated Encyclopedia . Kodansha (1993). (ISBN\u00a0 406205938X ) Standish, Isolde. New History of Japanese Cinema . Bloomsbury Academic (2006) (ISBN\u00a0 1441161546 ) Related articles [ modifier | Modifier and code ] external links [ modifier | Modifier and code ] "},{"@context":"http:\/\/schema.org\/","@type":"BreadcrumbList","itemListElement":[{"@type":"ListItem","position":1,"item":{"@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/all2en\/wiki32\/#breadcrumbitem","name":"Enzyklop\u00e4die"}},{"@type":"ListItem","position":2,"item":{"@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/all2en\/wiki32\/hasegawa-hasegawa-wikipedia\/#breadcrumbitem","name":"Hasegawa Hasegawa – Wikip\u00e9dia"}}]}]