1926 - 2015
Taeko Kono Japanese Writer
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Taeko Kono is a member of the following lists: 1926 births, Deaths from respiratory failure and People from Osaka Prefecture.
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Details
| First Name |
Taeko
|
| Last Name |
Kono
|
| Birthday |
24th February, 1926
|
| Birthplace |
Osaka, Japan
|
| Died |
29th January, 2015
|
| Zodiac Sign |
Pisces
|
| Nationality |
Japanese
|
| Occupation Text |
Author
|
| Occupation |
Writer
|
| Music Genre (Text) |
Fiction
|
Taeko Kōno (河野 多惠子, Kōno Taeko, February 24, 1926 – January 29, 2015) is one of the most important Japanese writers of the second half of the twentieth century, someone whose influence on contemporary Japanese writers is acknowledged to be immeasurable. Kōno is one of a generation of remarkable women writers who made an appearance in Japan in the 1960s and 1970s and who include Kurahashi Yumiko, Mori Mari, Setouchi Harumi, and Takahashi Takako (Japanese name order). She also established a reputation for herself as an acerbic essayist, a playwright and a literary critic. By the end of her life she was a leading presence in Japan's literary establishment, one of the first women writers to serve on the Akutagawa Literary Prize committee. Oe Kenzaburo, Japan's Nobel Laureate, described her as the most "lucidly intelligent" woman writers writing in Japan, and the US critic and academic Masao Miyoshi identified her as among the most "critically alert and historically intelligent." US critic and academic Davinder Bhowmik assesses her as “…one of the truly original voices of the twentieth century, beyond questions of gender or even nationality.” A writer who deals with some quite dark themes, Kōno is known to readers in English through the collection of short stories Toddler-Hunting and Other Stories (New Directions, 1996), which draws together her best writing from the 1960s.