Natsume SMseki
Natsume SMseki (1867-1916) was a Japanese novelist. Born in Babashita, a town in the Edo region of Ushigome, SMseki was the youngest of six children. Due to financial hardship, he was adopted by a childless couple who raised him from 1868 until their divorce eight years later, at which point SMseki returned to his biological family. Educated in Tokyo, he took an interest in literature and went on to study English and Chinese Classics while at the Tokyo Imperial University. He started his...See more
Natsume SMseki (1867-1916) was a Japanese novelist. Born in Babashita, a town in the Edo region of Ushigome, SMseki was the youngest of six children. Due to financial hardship, he was adopted by a childless couple who raised him from 1868 until their divorce eight years later, at which point SMseki returned to his biological family. Educated in Tokyo, he took an interest in literature and went on to study English and Chinese Classics while at the Tokyo Imperial University. He started his career as a poet, publishing haiku with the help of his friend and fellow-writer Masaoka Shiki. In 1895, he found work as a teacher at a middle school in Shikoku, which would serve as inspiration for his popular novel Botchan (1906). In 1900, SMseki was sent by the Japanese government to study at University College London. Later described as "the most unpleasant years in [his] life," SMseki's time in London introduced him to British culture and earned him a position as a professor of English literature back in Tokyo. Recognized for such novels as SanshirM (1908) and Kokoro (1914), SMseki was a visionary artist whose deep commitment to the life of humanity has earned him praise from such figures as Haruki Murakami, who named SMseki as his favorite writer. See less
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