Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. 吉増 剛造, Yoshimasu Gōzō; * 22. Februar 1939 in Suginami, Präfektur Tokio) ist ein japanischer Lyriker. Yoshimasu studierte an der Keiō-Universität. Von 1970 bis 1971 war er im Rahmen des Fulbright-Programms Gastautor an der University of Iowa. 1979–81 war er Poet-in-Residence an der Oakland University, seit 1984 ...

    • 吉増剛造 (japanisch)
    • japanischer Lyriker
    • 22. Februar 1939
    • Yoshimasu, Gōzō
  2. Gōzō Yoshimasu. Gōzō Yoshimasu (吉増 剛造|Yoshimasu Gōzō) (born 1939, Tokyo) is a prolific Japanese poet, photographer, artist and filmmaker active since the 1960s. He has received a number of literary and cultural awards, including the Takami Jun Prize (1971), the Rekitei Prize, the Purple Ribbon Medal in 2003 (given by ...

  3. Gôzô Yoshimasu, geboren 1939 in Tokio, lebt und arbeitet auch heute noch als Dichter, Essayist, Fotograf und Performance-Künstler in Japans Hauptstadt. Seit seinem ersten 1964 publizierten Lyrikband „Shuppatsu“ hat Yoshimasu zahlreiche Lyrik-, Prosa- und Essaysammlungen vorgelegt, die vereinzelt u.a. ins Englische, Französische ...

  4. Yoshimasu Gozo Navigates the Liminal Zone of Poetry | Frieze. The poet and artist creates works that occupy a transitional state between life and death. BY Sayuri Okamoto in Opinion | 06 JUN 23. This article appears in the columns section of frieze 235, based on the theme ' Time Warp '

  5. 5. Juli 2013 · Gōzō Yoshimasu is a prolific Japanese poet, photographer, artist and filmmaker active since the 1960s. He has received a number of literary and cultural awards, including the Takami Jun Prize , the Rekitei Prize, the Purple Ribbon Medal in 2003 , the 50th Mainichi Art Award for Poetry , and the Order of the Rising Sun, Gold Rays in ...

  6. 吉増剛造 (吉増 剛造(よします ごうぞう、1939年(昭和14年)2月22日 – )日本の詩人日本芸術院会員東京出身Gōzō Yoshimasu (吉増 剛造|Yoshimasu Gōzō) (born 1939, Tokyo) is a prolific Japanese poet, photographer, artist and filmmaker active since the 1960s. He has received a number of literary and cultural awards, including the Takami Jun Prize (1971), the Rekitei Prize, the Purple Ribbon Meda...

  7. 30. Jan. 2015 · In his most recent work, Yoshimasu, an aurally and visually stunning poet known for his Talmudic density, struggles to respond to the 3.11 disaster in Japan, which took the lives of over twenty thousand people. The experience of reading these poems is emotional, psychological, and physical, and grounded in the poet’s strong sense of mission.