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         Oe Kenzaburo:     more books (100)
  1. A Personal Matter by Kenzaburo Oë, 1994-01-13
  2. A Quiet Life (Oe, Kenzaburo) by Kenzaburo Oe, 1997-12-08
  3. Teach Us to Outgrow Our Madness: Four Short Novels: The Day He Himself Shall Wipe My Tears Away, Prize Stock, Teach Us to Outgrow Our Madness, Aghwee the Sky Monster by Kenzaburo Oe, 1994-10-13
  4. Nip the Buds, Shoot the Kids by Kenzaburo Oe, 1996-06-13
  5. The Silent Cry: A Novel by Kenzaburo Oe, 1994-07-07
  6. Changeling by Kenzaburo Oe, Deborah Boehm, 2010-03-16
  7. Grand Street 55: Egos (Winter 1996) by Kenzaburo Oe, Deborah Treisman, et all 1996-01-02
  8. An Echo of Heaven by Kenzaburo Oe, 2000-07
  9. Hiroshima Notes by Kenzaburo Oe, 1996-06-07
  10. The Novels of Oe Kenzaburo (Routledge Contemporary Japan Series) by Yasuko Claremont, 2009-01-15
  11. Rouse Up O Young Men of the New Age! by Kenzaburo Oe, John Nathan, 2002-03
  12. Somersault (Oe, Kenzaburo) by Kenzaburo Oe, Philip Gabriel, 2003-12-03
  13. The Crazy Iris and Other Stories of the Atomic Aftermath by Kenzaburo, editor Oe, 1985
  14. A Healing Family by Kenzaburo Oe, 2001-05

1. Kenzaburo Oe - Biography
Kenzaburo Oe – Biography. Michiko N.Wilson, The Marginal World of oe kenzaburoA Study in Themes and Techniques, New York, London Armonk, Sharpe, 1986.
http://www.nobel.se/literature/laureates/1994/oe-bio.html
Kenzaburo Oe
The Second World War broke out when Oe was six. Militaristic education extended to every nook and cranny of the country, the Emperor as both monarch and deity reigning over its politics and its culture. Young Oe, therefore, experienced the nation's myth and history as well as those of the village tradition, and these dual experiences were often in conflict. Oe's grandmother was a critical storyteller who defended the culture of the village, narrating to him humourously, but ever defiantly, anti-national stories. After his father's death during the war, his mother took over his father's role as educator. The books she bought him - The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and The Strange Adventures of Nils Holgersson - have left him with an impression he says 'he will carry to the grave'.
At the age of eighteen, Oe made his first long train trip to Tokyo, and in the following year enrolled in the Department of French Literature at Tokyo University where he received instruction under the tutelage of Professor Kazuo Watanabe, a specialist on Francois Rabelais. Rabelais' image system of grotesque realism, to use Mikhail Bakhtin's terminology, provided him with a methodology to positively and thoroughly reassess the myths and history of his native village in the valley.

2. Kenzaburo Oé Net Resources
It is included here for completeness, and so I could type the phrase oe kenzaburo Fun Club a couple of times. The oe kenzaburo
http://www.imsa.edu/~ender/resource.html
Altavista Search Engine
, with which I found most of these links.
NEW! maintained by Johnny Wallace Press Release An American Booksellers Association article about Oe The Future of Hope ... Complete text of Japan, the Ambiguous, and Myself from the Amazon.com on-line bookstore.
The following page will not be readable unless your computer is equipped with Japanese fonts, and you can read Japanese. It is included here for completeness, and so I could type the phrase "Oe Kenzaburo Fun Club" a couple of times.
The Oe Kenzaburo Fun Club
This page last updated 1-24-97. Jared Wadsworth / ender@imsa.edu

3. Famous Japanese - Oe Kenzaburo
oe kenzaburo. Date of Birth. 31 January 1935
http://www.kyoto-su.ac.jp/information/famous/ooek.html
Oe Kenzaburo
Date of Birth 31 January 1935 Place of Birth Kita-gun, Ehime-ken In 1994, a Japanese man won the greatest prize in the literary world, the Nobel prize for literature. His name is Oe Kenzaburo, 59 years old. He continues to write a lot of great works, even now. He was recognized as writer as "Shisyanohokori (the pride of dead man)", and, in 1958, won the prize of Mr.Akutagawa as "Shiiku (breeding)" and was recognized as the new leading writer. He was also cutting a brilliant figure as an international writer and attended meetings of writers in Asia and Africa. He is a pacifist, and wrote books on it: "Hiroshima-note," "Okinawa-note,"Kakujidai-no-sozoryoku," "Genbakugo-no-ningen." He has a son, Hikaru, who is a retarded, so he wrote about his life and bringing him up. Hikaru has a pure mind and warm heart, so he composes a lot of classical music. His works are all very tender, warm and artistic. Oe wrote some books, about his the most famous of which is "Kojinteki-na-Taiken(means personal experience)." In September in 1994, Oe finally won the Novel literary prize. People all over the world recognized him as one of the greatest writers in the world.

4. Oe Kenzaburo Unofficial Fan Club
A Personal Matter by Kenzaburo Oe (Translated by John Nathan). This isa homepage for oe kenzaburo lovers. Link collections about oe kenzaburo.
http://www.ops.dti.ne.jp/~kunio-i/personal/oe/oee.html
Japanese
The taxi raced down the wet streets at horrendous speed. If I die in an accident now before I save the baby, my whole twenty-seven years of life will have meant exactly nothing. Bird was stricken with a sense of fear more profound than any he had ever known. A Personal Matter by Kenzaburo Oe (Translated by John Nathan) This is a homepage for Oe Kenzaburo lovers. The name of this homepage is 'Oe Kenzaburo Fan Club', however , it is not a real fan club. This is my personal homepage, and unofficial homepage. This page has nothing with Mr.Oe or any publishers.
Unfortunately I can not use English enough, so this page is poorer than Japanese version. But I will raise this page little by little. I welcome your mail and I want to insert your message into this page, if you allow it.
Contents
Link collections about Oe Kenzaburo
News
2002/9/25 Oe has published new novel UREIGAO NO DOUJI in Japan
This novel is a continuation of TORIKAEKO(Changeling). The title means a sad-faced child.

5. Books About Oe Kenzaburo
The summary for this Japanese page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set.
http://www.ops.dti.ne.jp/~kunio-i/personal/oe/aboutoe.html
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6. Kenzaburo Oe
For further reading Approaches to the Modern Japanese Novel, ed. by K. Tsurutaand T. Swann (1976); oe kenzaburo and Contemporary Japanese Literature by
http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/oe.htm
Choose another writer in this calendar: by name:
A
B C D ... Z by birthday from the calendar Credits and feedback Kenzaburo Oe (1935-) Japanese novelist who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1994. Oe has often dealt with marginal people and outcasts and isolation from individual level to social and cultural levels. Another central theme - as in the works of a number of other Japanese writers - is the conflict between traditions and modern Western culture. " My observation is that after one hundred and twenty years of modernisation since the opening of the country, present-day Japan is split between two opposite poles of ambiguity. I too am living as a writer with this polarisation imprinted on me like a deep scar." (from Nobel Lecture, 1994) Kenzaburo Oe was born in a mountain village on the island of Shikoku, the smallest of the four main Japanese islands, where his family had lived for centuries. The village and the forests surrounding it later inspired several of Oe's pastoral works. In 1944 Oe's father died in the Pacific war, and in the same year he lost his grandmother, who had taught him art and oral performance. After attending a local school, Oe transferred to a high school in Matsuyama City. He won an admission to the University of Tokyo, where he studied French literature and received his B.A. in 1959. His final-year thesis was on the French writer Jean-Paul Sartre. Another important French writer for Oe was Albert Camus. During these years he started to write and explore his childhood, when the World War II had filled his mind with horror and excitement. His early works expressed his sense of the degradation and disorientation caused by Japan's surrender at the end of World War II. Sex and violence labelled his depiction of rootless young people. Oe wanted to experiment with language and create a new way of literary expression, which would capture the social and psychological changes that took place in his home country. He also had to cope with a personal handicap, the inferiority complex of a shy young man from the country, who stuttered and spoke with heavy Shokoku accent.

7. Metropolis - Big In Japan: Oe Kenzaburo
BIG IN JAPAN oe kenzaburo. Courtesy of Kyodo Photo Service. Born on theisland of Shikoku in 1935, the son of a successful paper merchant
http://metropolis.japantoday.com/biginjapanarchive299/278/biginjapaninc.htm
BIG IN JAPAN
Oe Kenzaburo
Courtesy of Kyodo Photo Service Born on the island of Shikoku in 1935, the son of a successful paper merchant, Nobel Prize-winning writer Oe grew up in an isolated, rural setting, his fertile imagination encouraged by his grandmother's retelling of legends and folk tales. He was an introverted, dreamy child, who excelled first at math and then at literature.
Realizing the potential shown by his high school studies, Oe moved to the mainland in 1954 to enter Tokyo University. His fiction was published first in student magazines, and soon drew the attention of the literary world outside. In 1958 his short story "Shiiku" (Prize Stock) won the Akutagawa Prize for Literature, and in the same year his first novel came out - "Memeshiri Kouchi" (Nip the Buds, Shoot the Kids). Oe, following his graduation at the age of 23, plunged directly into a career as a full-time writer. In 1960 he married Yukari, the sister of film director and old high-school friend, Itami Juzo.
In the sixties Japan saw its new-found economic prosperity shaken by recurring student riots over the US-Japan defense treaty. Recording the atmosphere of nuclear paranoia following the Cuban missile crisis, Oe found himself under attack from both left and right-wingers for refusing to bow down to party dogma. The year 1963, however, was to bring a very personal tragedy; the couple's first son, Hikari, was born with a cerebral hernia - the surgery to save the infant's life resulted in irreversible brain damage.

8. Metropolis - Big In Japan: Oe Kenzaburo
music 281 Nasubi Comedian 280 Doi Takako First female Speaker of the House 279Nakamura Kichiemon Retiring Kabuki actor 278 oe kenzaburo Nobel prize
http://metropolis.japantoday.com/biginjapanarchive299/280/biginjapaninc.htm
BIG IN JAPAN
Doi Takako
Despite the claims of democracy and modernization, women in Japanese politics are about as welcome as a dragon tattoo in a sento . The smug fat cats in suits who've controlled Japan throughout the twentieth century still have a firm grip on power - but Doi Takako has done more than most to try to break that stranglehold. Currently leader of the Social Democratic Party, it was Doi who achieved the highest government rank that a woman has held so far - that of Speaker of the House.
Doi entered political life in 1969, after a career as a lecturer at first Kansei Gakuin University and then Seiwa Women's University. The 1970s and '80s were a long, hard struggle against the prejudices of the male-dominated, corruption-riddled bureaucracy that passed for a government, a fight that was well- documented in her biography "My Way" (she hasn't commented on how much of her ideology has been inspired by Sinatra).
In 1986 she was elected Chairperson of the SDPJ and became a media celebrity, sparking a so-called "Madonna boom" - a wave of women who aspired to enter politics and follow her example. In 1989 came her first serious battle, over the new consumption tax, which she and her party campaigned against. The tax was introduced, and the ruling LDP party was voted in once more - but suffered heavy losses, while Doi's party won many new seats. This led her to utter her most famous one-liner, "The mountain has moved."

9. Oe Kenzaburo
oe kenzaburo. oe kenzaburo, 1994. Copyright Kurita Kaku/Gamma Liaison.Audio (b. Jan. 31, 1935, Ehime prefecture, Shikoku, Japan), Japanese
http://www.britannica.com/nobel/micro/435_17.html
Oe Kenzaburo
Oe Kenzaburo, 1994 [Audio] (b. Jan. 31, 1935, Ehime prefecture, Shikoku, Japan), Japanese novelist whose works express the disillusionment and rebellion of his post-World War II generation. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1994. Oe came from a family of wealthy landowners, who lost most of their property with the occupation-imposed land reform following the war. He entered the University of Tokyo in 1954, graduating in 1959, and the brilliance of his writing while he was still a student caused him to be hailed the most promising young writer since Mishima Yukio. Oe first attracted attention on the literary scene with Shisha no ogori Lavish Are the Dead ), published in the magazine Bungakukai. His literary output was, however, uneven. His first novel, Memushiri kouchi Nip the Buds, Shoot the Kids ), was highly praised, and he won a major literary award, the Akutagawa Prize, for Shiiku The Catch ). But his second novel, Wa re ra no jidai (1959; "Our Age"), was poorly received, as his contemporaries felt that Oe was becoming increasingly preoccupied with social and political criticism. Oe became deeply involved in the politics of the New Left. The murder in 1960 of Chairman Asanuma Inejiro of the Japanese Socialist Party by a right-wing youth inspired Oe to write two short stories in 1961, "Sebuntin" ("Seventeen") and "Seiji shonen shisu," the latter of which drew heavy criticism from right-wing organizations.

10. LE NOVITA' GLI APPUNTAMENTI GLI AUTORI PERCORSI DI LETTURA EBOOKS
Translate this page LA CASA EDITRICE. oe kenzaburo. Kenzaburo Oe è nato nel 1935 nell’isoladi Shikoku, nel sud ovest del Giappone. A ventidue anni
http://www.garzantilibri.it/autori_main.php?page=schedaautore&CPID=421

11. Oe, Kenzaburo
Hi everyone, welcome to this webpage on oe kenzaburo. Lastly, a set of links pertainingto oe kenzaburo is located at the bottom of this page. Here we go!
http://www.ucalgary.ca/~xyang/j341/ooepg.htm
This page is prepared by Jack Cheng and Kian Yong Yeo) Background: -He married Itami Juzo's sister in 1960. -His son (光) was born in 1963. The birth of 光 caused a change in his writing. He was now writing about his son, and the relationship they shared. His first novel after the birth of his son, A Personal Matter, is about a father dealing with the birth of a mentally handicapped child. He has written several stories with similar themes, which he refers to as his "idiot son" stories. -These stories were mainly significant in his writing the Nobel Prize in 1994. -After accepting the Nobel Prize, He refused to accept the Order of Cultural Merit, one of Japan's highest honors. He did this because of his distrust of the Japanese government. -He was finished writing novels. His stated reason for this is that he wrote his fiction to give a voice to his son, and now his son has his own voice. -He has been giving lectures in universities in the United States, Germany and Japan in recent years. ( Oe Kenzaburo with his son Hikari) Additional notes: Brain herniation Alternative names: cerebellar herniation; herniation of the brain; herniation syndrome; transtentorial herniation; uncal herniation

12. Oe Kenzaburo: "A Personal Matter"
Biography. Kenzaburo Oe was born in 1935, in a small Japanese townon the island of Shikoku. Why did Kenzaburo Oe write this story?
http://www.ucalgary.ca/~xyang/j341_01f/oef20.htm
This page is prepared by Thomas Court and Tsuey-Lin Yap
Oe, Kenzaburo
  • Biography
  • Grotesque Realism
  • "A Personal Matter"
  • The Real Story
    Biography
    Kenzaburo Oe was born in 1935, in a small Japanese town on the island of Shikoku. The women of the Oe clan had long assumed the role of storytellers. After his fatherfs death during the war, his mother took over his fatherfs role as educator. Oefs mother made sure that he had access to books as a child. Oefs favourite books as a young boy were "The Adventure of Huckleberry Finn" and "The Strange Adventures of Nils Holgersson." These two books left him with an impression he says "He will carry to the grave." The Second World War started when he was six. Oe and his peers received military education in schools. Oe recalls, gThe Ethics teacher would call the boys to the front of the class and demand of them one by one what they would do if the Emperor commanded them to die. Shaking with fright, the child would answer: "I would die, Sir, I would rip open my belly and die." Students passed the Imperial portrait with their eyes to the ground, afraid their eyeballs would explode if they looked His Imperial Majesty in the face.hKenzaburo had a recurring dream in which the Emperor swopped out of the sky like a bird, his body covered with white feathers. On the day the Emperor announced the Surrender in August 1945, Oe was a ten-year-old boy living in a mountain village. Here is how he recalls the event: "The adults sat around their radios and cried. The children gathered outside in the dusty road and whispered their bewilderment. We were most confused and disappointed by the fact that the Emperor had spoken in a human voice, no different from any adultfs. None of us understood what he was saying, but we all had heard his voice. One of my friends could even imitate it cleverly. Laughing, we surrounded him - a twelve year old in grimy shorts who spoke with the Emperorfs voice. A minute later we felt afraid. We looked at one another; no one spoke. How could we believe that an august presence of such awful power had become an ordinary human being on a designated summer day?"

13. OE KENZABURO AND THE FIFTY-YEAR POSTWAR PERIOD Nobuko Pugarelli
oe kenzaburo AND THE FIFTYYEAR POSTWAR PERIOD Nobuko Pugarelli. Professorof Japanese. University of Hawaii Honolulu Community College.
http://mcel.pacificu.edu/aspac/papers/scholars/pugarelli/pugarelli.htm
OE KENZABURO AND THE FIFTY-YEAR POSTWAR PERIOD Nobuko Pugarelli Professor of Japanese University of Hawaii
Honolulu Community College Biographical Sketch
Oe Kenzaburo was born on January 31, 1935, in Ose village, Kita Province, in Ehime prefecture on the southern island of Shikoku. When he was six, the Pacific War broke out; at nine, he lost both his father and grandmother. When he was ten, an A-bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, and the Emperor announced the unconditional surrender of Japan. In 1954 Oe was admitted to Tokyo University and majored in French literature. Oe's first commercially published story, "Shisha no ogori (The Arrogance of the Dead)," missed the Akutagawa Prize by one vote. He was awarded that prize the following year, 1958, for "Shiiku (The Catch)." After graduating from the Tokyo University, Oe married Yukari in 1960, the oldest daughter of a film script writer, Itami Mansaku. In May 1960 he traveled to the People's Republic of China as a member of the Japan-China Literary Delegation and met with Mao Zedong. In 1961 he traveled through Eastern and Western Europe, and the Soviet Union, and met Sartre in Paris. In June 1963 his first boy, Hikari, was born with serious brain damage. Oe put a halt to his writing and all other works, and visited Hiroshima. Hiroshima noto (Notes on Hiroshima) was published later in 1965. During this personally very difficult time in the 1960s he wrote, among other works, Kojinteki na taiken (A Personal Matter) based of his experience with his baby, which won the Shinchosha Literary Prize in 1964; and "Manen Gannen no futtoboru (The Football Game of the First Year of Manen, 1967)" after he came back from his trips to Okinawa, the United States, and Australia.

14. Oe Kenzaburo And The Fifty-Year Postwar Period - Japanese Translation
oe kenzaburo and the FiftyYear Postwar Period 1994 Key Words ?, oe kenzaburo.
http://mcel.pacificu.edu/aspac/papers/scholars/pugarelli/j-index.html
Oe Kenzaburo and the Fifty-Year Postwar Period ‚Ì‚Ü‚Æ‚ß
Key Words

‘å]Œ’ŽO˜Y Oe Kenzaburo ƒm[ƒxƒ‹•¶ŠwÜ The Nobel Prize in Literature Important works ‘¾•½—mí‘ˆŒã After Pacific War Oe Hikari
Click Here to Return To The Oe Kenzaburo and the Fifty-Year Postwar Period Home Page

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15. Untitled
Articles Published (as Reiko Tachibana Nemoto) On Two Interviews Between GunterGrass and oe kenzaburo, World Literature Today, 67.2 (Spring 1993) 3015.
http://www.personal.psu.edu/faculty/r/x/rxn6/

16. Oe Kenzaburo
oe kenzaburo (1935PresentNobel Prize, 1994) oe kenzaburo was notone of the big five 20th century Japanese novelists I was
http://www.washburn.edu/reference/bridge24/Oe.html
Oe Kenzaburo (1935-PresentNobel Prize, 1994) Oe Kenzaburo was not one of the "big five" 20th century Japanese novelists I was meeting in the course I took in 1973. Abe Kobo made it (though still alive), in part, because he was the professor's dissertation subject. But Oe, who is younger than I am (was not yet forty then) did have the beginning of a reputation among readers of Japanese fiction in English translation, based largely on a single novel at that time, A Personal Matter , the story of a man, Bird, who must come to terms with, first, the responsibilities of being married at all, thenthe central action of the bookhow to deal with the birth of a deformed child, who seems like a monster to him. I read this novel that summer, and was made uncomfortable by the way the psychology of the problem was handled (the basic problem of the deformed child Oe has evidently handled very well in his own life). I guess my problem was that I didn't find Bird a sympathetic characterdidn't like himso didn't go looking for more Oe to read. This novel had been translated by John Nathan, who tells the story of how he lost Mishima as a friend and client for translation (he had translated Mishima's

17. Books Of The World. Book Searches - Libros En Español. Buscador De Libros
Translate this page oe kenzaburo. Hola a todos. Me han recomendado leer a oe kenzaburo y queria sabervuestra opinion sobre sus libros. Gracias. Respuestas Publicar respuesta.
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18. Oe Kenzaburo: Oe, Kenzaburo
oe kenzaburo Oe, Kenzaburo Discussion Deck If ye would like to moderate theOe, Kenzaburo Discussion Deck, please drop becket@jollyroger.com a line.
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oe kenzaburo:
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Posted by miguel wanden bergh on September 12, 19100 at 13:49:09: I would like to read comments on Oe's novels, in particular those translated by me into Spanish. Thus, this is of course a call to Spanish readers (anyone out there?)
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19. Local Culture And Oe Kenzaburo
The summary for this Japanese page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set.
http://www.nagoya-ku.ac.jp/teacher/takeday/

20. Reisst Die Knospen Ab Oe Kenzaburo
Translate this page Reisst die Knospen ab oe kenzaburo. Titel Reisst die Knospen ab.Autor oe kenzaburo. Rubrik Belletristik Romane Erzählungen
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Reisst die Knospen ab Oe Kenzaburo
Titel: Reisst die Knospen ab.
Autor: Oe Kenzaburo
Rubrik: Belletristik Romane Erzählungen Japanische Literatur Romane Erzählungen
Kategorie: Belletristik
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