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Yumeno Kyūsaku

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Occupation
  
Writer

Role
  
Author

Literary movement
  
Romanticism, Surrealism

Name
  
Yumeno Kyusaku

Movies
  
Labyrinth of Dreams

Yumeno Kyusaku kyusaku yumeno Tumblr
Born
  
4 January 1889Fukuoka, Fukuoka prefecture, Japan (
1889-01-04
)

Genre
  
detective stories, science fiction, horror

Died
  
March 11, 1936, Tokyo, Japan

Books
  
Complete Kyusaku Yumeno, Uindozu ni yoru joho shori nyumon: WindowsXP Word Excel PowerPoint

Similar People
  
Suehiro Maruo, Edogawa Ranpo, Dai Sato, Marquis de Sade, Nathaniel Hawthorne

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Yumeno Kyūsaku (夢野 久作, 4 January 1889 – 11 March 1936) was the pen name of the early Shōwa period Japanese author Sugiyama Taidō. The pen name literally means "a person who always dreams". He wrote detective novels and is known for his avant-gardism and his surrealistic, wildly imaginative and fantastic, even bizarre narratives. His son is Sugiyama Tatsumaru, the Green Father of India.

Contents

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Early life

Yumeno Kyūsaku httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Kyūsaku was born in Fukuoka city, Fukuoka prefecture as Sugiyama Naoki. His father, Sugiyama Shigemaru, was a major figure in the pre-war ultranationalist organization, the Genyōsha. After graduating from Shuyukan he attended the Literature Department at Keio University, but dropped out on orders from his father, and returned home to take care of the family farm. In 1926 he decided to become a Buddhist priest, but after a couple of years in the monastery, he returned home again as Sugiyama Taido. By this time, he had developed a strong interest in the traditional Japanese drama form of Noh, with its genre of ghost stories and supernatural events. He found employment as a freelance reporter for the Kyushu Nippō newspaper (which later became the Nishinippon Shimbun), while writing works of fiction on the side.

Literary career

Yumeno Kyūsaku Dogla Magla Vol2 Kyusaku Yumeno Illustration by Masakane Yonekura

Kyūsaku’s first success was a nursery tale Shiraga Kozō (White Hair Boy, 1922), which was largely ignored by the public. It was not until his first novella, Ayakashi no Tsuzumi (Apparitional Hand Drum, 1924) in the literary magazine Shin-Seinen that his name became known.

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His subsequent works include Binzume jigoku (Hell in the Bottles, 1928), Kori no hate (End of the Ice, 1933) and his most significant novel Dogra Magra (ドグラマグラ, 1935), which is considered a precursor of modern Japanese science fiction and was adapted for a 1988 movie.

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Dogra Magra exemplifies modern Japanese avant-garde gothic literature. In the story, the protagonist/narrator wakes up in a hospital with amnesia. He finds out that he was the subject of an experiment by a now-dead psychiatrist, and the doctors are working to bring back his memories. It is not clear whether he was a psychotic killer or the victim of a strange psychological experiment, but it is told that he killed his mother and wife and that he inherited his psychotic tendencies from an insane ancestor. This novel is strongly influenced by Freudian psychoanalysis and through Yumeno's contacts there, provides considerable historical insight into the development of the study of psychoanalysis at Kyushu Imperial University.

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Kyūsaku died of a cerebral hemorrhage in 1936 while talking with a visitor at home.

English translation

Short stories

  • "Love After Death" (original title: Shigo no Koi) (Modanizumu: Modernist Fiction from Japan, 1913-1938, University of Hawaii Press, 2008)
  • "Hell in a Bottle" (original title: Binzume Jigoku) (Three-Dimensional Reading: Stories of Time and Space in Japanese Modernist Fiction, 1911-1932, University of Hawaii Press, 2013)
  • Essay

  • "Terrifying Tokyo" (Tokyo stories: a literary stroll, University of California Press, 2002)
  • French translation

    Novel

  • Dogra Magra Philippe Picquier (2003). ISBN 2-87730-645-3
  • Spanish translation

    Short stories

  • El infierno de las chicas [The hell of the girls] (in Spanish), Satori, 2014, ISBN 978-84-941920-7-4 .
  • References

    Yumeno Kyūsaku Wikipedia