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Famous Like Me > Writer > A > Takeo Arishima

Profile of Takeo Arishima on Famous Like Me

 
Name: Takeo Arishima  
   
Also Know As:
   
Date of Birth: 4th March 1878
   
Place of Birth: Suido-cho, Koishikawa, Tokyo, Japan
   
Profession: Writer
 
 
From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia

Arishima Takeo (有島 武郎, March 4, 1878, Tokyo - June 9, 1923) was a Japanese author. His two younger brothers, Arishima Ikuma (有島生馬) and Satomi Ton (里美弴) were also authors.

Arishima was born into a wealthy family as the son of an official in the Ministry of Finance. He entered Gakushuin, a prestigious school famous for educating the emperor's family, when he was 10 years old. After he graduated Gakushuin at 19, he entered the Sapporo Agricultural College (the present-day Faculty of Agriculture at Hokkaido University). During his studies at the university, he attempted suicide with Morimoto Kokichi (森本厚吉), who later founded several women's schools in Japan. The suicide failed, and he subsequently became influenced by Uchimura Kanzo and became a Christian in 1901. After graduation, Arishima went to the United States and studied at Harvard University after a short stint in the army. In America he became critical towards Christianity, attracted to socialism, and influenced by the works of people such as Walt Whitman, Henrik Ibsen, and Peter Kropotkin.

After he returned to Japan, he reentered the army before becoming an English teacher in 1909. Through his brother Ikuma, he also became acquainted with authors who graduated from Gakushuin, including Shiga Naoya and Mushanokoji Saneatsu. Arishima and these writers formed a group, which was named after their literary magazine Shirakaba (Birch), which was first published in 1911. He wrote novels and criticisms and was known as one of the central figures in the Shirakaba group.

Arishima married in 1910,but his wife passed away in 1916 because of tuberculosis, leaving him three children. In 1922, Arishima met Hatano Akiko, a married woman and an editor working for a famous women's magazine. Their relationship quickly developed into an extramarital affair, which soon came to be known by Hatano's husband. This lead to Arishima and Hatano committing suicide in Karuizawa by hanging themselves.

Arishima's major works include:

  • Aru Onna (A Certain Woman) 1919
  • Oshiminaku Ai wa Ubau (Love Robs without Hesitation)
  • Kain no Matsuei (Descendant of Cain) 1917

External Links

  • Arishima Takeo page at Aozora Bunko, a web library

This content from Wikipedia is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Takeo Arishima