Yutaka Haniya
Yutaka Haniya (埴谷 雄高, Haniya Yutaka, December 19, 1909 – February 19, 1997) was a noted Japanese author.
Biography
Haniya was born in Taiwan, then a Japanese colony, to a samurai family named Hannya after the Hannya Shingyo (Heart Sutra). He had a sickly childhood and suffered from tuberculosis in his teens. Although originally interested in anarchism, in 1931 he joined the Japanese Communist Party, became its Agriculture Director the following year, and was promptly arrested.[1] While in the prison's hospital, he devoted himself to studying Immanuel Kant's Critique of Pure Reason.
After World War II, Haniya founded a little magazine entitled Kindai Bungaku (Modern Literature) which became very influential. In this role he discovered and published Kōbō Abe, who subsequently joined Haniya's avant-garde group Yoru no Kai (Night Group).
Haniya was a prolific writer; after his death, Kodansha published his complete works in a set of 19 volumes. He won the 6th Tanizaki Prize in 1970 for his collection Black Horses in the Darkness and other stories.[2]
Selected works
- Death Spirits, (Shirei, 死靈), 1946-1996
- Black Horses in the Darkness and other stories, (Yami no naka no kuroi uma, 闇のなかの黒い馬), 1970
References
- Tajiri, Yoshiki. "Beckett and Haniya Yutaka: Two Versions of the Ontological Enquiry". Journal of Irish Studies. 17: 109–115. JSTOR 20533486.
- "谷崎潤一郎賞受賞作品一覧" (in Japanese). Chuokoron-Shinsha. Retrieved August 13, 2018.