Kazusuke Ogawa

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Kazusuke Ogawa (小川和佑, Ogawa Kazusuke, 29 April 1930 – 20 September 2014) was a Japanese literary critic.

Ogawa was born in Tokyo, and graduated from Meiji University's Literature Department in 1951.[1] Having Shin'ichirō Nakamura as his mentor, he began writing poetry and literary criticism, and after a stint as a high school teacher in Tochigi Prefecture, he became an assistant professor at Showa Women's University. After retiring, he also worked as a lecturer at his alma mater and at Tokyo Denki University.[2] After 1990 many of his writings centered on cherry blossoms.

He died on 20 September 2014 of stomach cancer.[3]

Works (selection)

  • "Shiki" to sono shijin, 1970
  • Miyoshi Tatsuji kenkyū, 1970
  • Shōwa jojōshi kenkyū : Tachihara Michizō kōshō to giron, 1971
  • Miyoshi Tatsuji no sekai, 1972
  • Itō Shizuo ron, 1973
  • Shōwa bungaku ron kō, 1975
  • Takahashi Kazumi kenkyū, 1976
  • Tachihara Michizō kenkyū, 1977
  • Gendaishi dochaku to genshitsu, 1976
  • Ritoru magajin hakkutsu : bungakushi no suiheisen, 1976
  • Shōwa bungaku no ichisokumen : shiteki kyōensha no bungaku, 1977
  • Tachihara Michizō ai no tegami : bungaku arubamu, 1978
  • Karuizawa : bundan shiryō, 1980
  • Itō Shizuo : kokō no jojō shijin, 1980
  • Bunmei kaika no shi, 1980
  • Bungakuhi no aru fūkei : shi no kokoro shi no fūdo, 1983
  • Hori Tatsuo sono ai to shi, 1984
  • Mishima Yukio : han "Nihon rōmanha" ron, 1985
  • Hori Tatsuo : sakka no kyōgai, 1986
  • Sakura no bungakushi, 1991
  • Shōka, sanbika, gunka no shigen, 2005
  • Sakura to Nihon bunka : seimeibi kara sange no hana e, 2007

References

  1. ^ 小川和佑氏死去(文芸評論家) (in Japanese). Archived from the original on September 23, 2014. Retrieved September 23, 2014.
  2. ^ 小川和佑 (in Japanese). Retrieved September 23, 2014.
  3. Asahi Shimbun. Archived from the original
    on September 24, 2015. Retrieved September 23, 2014.

External links