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  1. Nov 10, 2020 · In 1963, one of Japan’s most promising young photographers collaborated with renowned author Mishima Yukio on Barakei (Ordeal by Roses), a remarkable collection of artistically creative ...

  2. Nov 24, 2017 · On November 25, 1970, the celebrated author Mishima Yukio shocked Japan with his ritual suicide. Damian Flanagan argues that his death went beyond a nationalistic call to arms or the final act of ...

  3. Oct 2, 2020 · Mishima was born Hiraoka Kimitake in 1925. As the Shōwa era (1926–89) began the following year, the author’s age remained in step with the numbering of the era; he was 20 in 1945 (Shōwa 20 ...

  4. Nov 2, 2020 · Half a century has passed since the demise of Mishima Yukio, for many decades the world’s best-known Japanese literary author. By number of translated book titles, he is far ahead of Kawabata ...

  5. Nov 25, 2020 · On November 25, 1970, Mishima Yukio handed the manuscript for the final part of his tetralogy Hōjō no umi (trans. The Sea of Fertility) to his editor.The same day, after an attempt to rouse Self ...

  6. Dec 11, 2017 · Le 25 novembre 1970, le suicide rituel du célèbre écrivain Mishima Yukio a soulevé une onde de choc au Japon. Damian Flanagan soutient que ce suicide ne peut être réduit à un appel aux ...

  7. Oct 23, 2020 · Mishima Yukio, Abe Kôbô, Ishikawa Jun et Kawabata Yasunari lisent lors d’une conférence de presse à l’Imperial Hotel le 28 février 1967 leur déclaration conjointe appelant l’opinion ...

  8. Jun 24, 2020 · Mishima Yukio (left) at an observation event in Hibiya, Tokyo, in June 1957. (Courtesy UFO Fureaikan) (Women’s Club) about a cigar-shaped UFO-like object he witnessed with his wife from the top ...

  9. Sep 29, 2023 · One of Mishima Yukio’s most famous works, the 1949 Kamen no kokuhaku (trans. by Meredith Weatherby as Confessions of a Mask) is a first-person novel painstakingly depicting the thinking of a ...

  10. Apr 27, 2020 · Mishima Yukio was the third member of this group, and another Nobel candidate. His 1956 Kinkakuji (trans. The Temple of the Golden Pavilion) reimagines the real-life arson of the titular Kyoto temple.

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