Fuyue Anzai
Appearance
Fuyue Anzai (安西 冬衛, Anzai Fuyue, March 9, 1898 – August 24, 1965) was a Japanese poet from Nara Prefecture, Japan. In 1920, he began work in Dalian, China where he developed gangrene and subsequently lost his arm.
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Anzai was one of the founding fathers of the magazine Shi To Shiron (or, Poetry and Poetics) and the journal Asia.[1] He published several anthologies, including Gunkan Mari (The Battleship Mari) and Ajia no Kanko (The Asian Salt Lake). Other works by Anzai include: Dattan Kaikyô to Chô (Butterflies and the Mongolian Strait, 1947) and Zaseru Tôgyûshi (The Sitting Matador, 1949).
His second son is Japanese historical psychology author Jiro Anzai (安西二郎).
References
[edit]- ^ Xiong, Ying (2014). Representing Empire: Japanese Colonial Literature in Taiwan and Manchuria. Brill. ISBN 9789004274112.