Morio Kita
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Morio Kita(Bắc đỗ phu,Kita Morio)was thepen nameofSokichi Saitō(Trai đằng tông cát,Saitō Sōkichi,1 May 1927 – 24 October 2011),aJapanesepsychiatrist, novelist and essayist.[1]
Kita was the second son of poetMokichi Saitō.Shigeta Saitō ,his older brother, was also a psychiatrist. The essayistYuka Saitōis Kita's daughter.[2][3]
Kita attendedAzabu High Schooland Matsumoto Higher School (now part ofShinshu University), and graduated fromTohoku University's School of Medicine.[4]He initially worked as a doctor atKeio UniversityHospital. Motivated by the collections of his father's poems and the books of German authorThomas Mann,he decided to become a novelist.
Kita suffered frommanic–depressive disorderfrom middle age onwards.[5]
Awards
[edit]- 1960:Akutagawa Prize,for the novel,In The Corner Of Night And Fog,which takes its title fromNacht und Nebel,the Nazi campaign to eliminate Jews, the mentally ill and other minorities. The novel concerns the moral quandary of staff at a German mental hospital during the final years of the Second World War. Faced with demands from the SS that the most severely ill patients be segregated for transportation to a special camp, where it is obvious that they will be eliminated, the more morally conscious of the doctors make desperate efforts to protect the patients without outwardly defying the authorities. A parallel theme is the personal tragedy of a young Japanese researcher affiliated with the mental hospital, whose own schizophrenia has been triggered by the disappearance of his half-Jewish wife. (Shinchosha Co., Morio Kita -In the Corner of Night and Fog and Other Stories,2011)
Bibliography
[edit]Incomplete - to be updated
Novels
[edit]- Ghosts(1954)
- The House of Nire.Translated by Dennis Keene. New York:Kodansha International.1984.ISBN0-87011-592-8.Briefly noted inThe New Yorker60/48 (14 January 1985): p. 117
Essays
[edit]- Papa wa Tanoshii Sōutubyō (work with Yuka Saitō,Asahi Shimbun Company,ISBN978-4022504999)
Work for television
[edit]- NescaféGold Blend commercial (1974)
- Tetsuko no Heya (1980 and 12 May 2008; with Yuka Saitō)
References
[edit]- ^Novelist-essayist "Morio Kita dies at 84"Archived28 October 2011 at theWayback Machine
- ^"Novelist-essayist Morio Kita dies at 84".The Mainichi Daily News.26 October 2011. Archived fromthe originalon 18 February 2013.Retrieved24 February2012.
- ^Lecture of Morio Kita and Yuka Saitō in Hokuto, Yamanashi, March 13, 2010(in Japanese)
- ^【 chế độ cũ cao giáo liêu ca vật ngữ 】 ( 6 ) giáo thụ にウケた bắc đỗ phu の trân đáp án(in Japanese).Sankei Shimbun.9 September 2012. Archived fromthe originalon 11 September 2012.Retrieved20 October2012.
- ^【 bắc đỗ phu さん chết đi 】 trọng hậu な thuần văn học と, ユーモア tác phẩm が sống chung(in Japanese).Sankei Shimbun.26 October 2011. Archived fromthe originalon 30 November 2011.Retrieved24 February2012.
- 1927 births
- 2011 deaths
- Azabu High School alumni
- Japanese children's writers
- Japanese essayists
- Japanese fantasy writers
- 20th-century Japanese novelists
- 21st-century Japanese novelists
- Japanese psychiatrists
- Japanese travel writers
- Academic staff of Keio University
- Night and Fog program
- People with bipolar disorder
- Tohoku University alumni
- Akutagawa Prize winners
- Writers from Tokyo
- 20th-century essayists
- 21st-century essayists
- 20th-century pseudonymous writers
- Japanese writer stubs