Sankichi toge biography of william shakespeare

Sankichi Tōge

Japanese poet

Sankichi Tōge (峠 三吉, Tōge Sankichi, 19 February – 10 March ), born Mitsuyoshi Tōge, was a Japanese poet, activist, and survivor of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima. He is best known for his collection of poems Genbaku Shishu ("Poems of the Atomic Bomb"), published in

Early life and education

Mitsuyoshi Tōge, later known as Sankichi Tōge, was born on 19 February[citation needed] in Osaka,[1] the youngest son of Ki'ichi Tōge, a successful manufacturer of bricks.

Early life and education [ edit ]. The most serious and intense skepticism began in the 19 th century when adoration for Shakespeare was at its highest. John Ward, the local vicar of Holy Trinity Church in Stratford where Shakespeare is buried , writes in a diary account that:. Church records show he was interred at Holy Trinity Church on April 25,

From the start Tōge was a sickly child, suffering from asthma and periodic vomiting.[citation needed]

His family was politically radical, with two siblings official members of the Communist Party and all of the children having been arrested at least once; however, Tōge did not become involved in politics at this time.[2]

He graduated from Hiroshima Prefecture's School of Commerce in and started working for the Hiroshima Gas Company.[citation needed]

Poetry and activism

Tōge started composing poems in the second year of middle school.

Early influences included Tolstoy, Heine, Tōson Shimazaki, and Haruo Sato. By he had composed three thousand tanka and even more haiku. They were mostly lyric poems.[citation needed]

Tōge was 28 in Midori-machi, 3&#;km (&#;mi) from the hypocenter of the bomb dropped by the Americans on Hiroshima to end World War II in After this, his activism included the publication of several books advocating peace and opposing the use of nuclear weapons.[3] Among other groups and movements, he became involved in and took up some leadership positions in the Hiroshima Poets Society (Hiroshima shijin kyōkai), the New Japan Literature Association (Shin Nihon bungaku kai), the Our Poetry Association (Warera no shi no kai), and the Communist-sponsored Culture Circle (Bunka sākuru) in Hiroshima.

  • Downvote
  • Sankichi Tōge - Wikipedia
  • Tōge Sankichi - Popular Protest in Post War Japan: The ...
  • William Shakespeare - Playwright and Poet, Age, Wife ...
  • He also became involved in workers' rights and trade unions. Because of this activism, he gained a higher profile than two other prominent poets who also wrote about the bomb, Hara Tamiki and Ōta Yōko.[2]

    In , he submitted an essay entitled "Hiroshima in ", containing ideas for the revival of the city, to a competition held by Chugoku Shimbun newspaper, winning first prize.

    The essay, which some later said had been written by his elder brother, was published in Chugoku Shimbun.[4] In he joined the Japanese Communist Party.[2]

    By he was writing poetry very different from his earlier efforts, as he became more politicised.[2] His first collection of the atomic bomb works, Genbaku Shishu ("Poems of the Atomic Bomb") was published in In the same year, it was sent to the World Youth Peace Festival in Berlin, where it garnered international acclaim.[3]

    His work includes references to the political environment of the time, especially of Japan occupied by the Allied Forces, and he expresses anger at the United States, while not mentioning the country by name.[2]

    Personal life and death

    In Tōge was diagnosed, wrongly, with tuberculosis.

    Believing himself to have only a few years to live, he spent most of his time as an invalid.[citation needed]

    In December , he was baptized into the Catholic Church, and did not denounce religion after joining the Communist Party.[2]

    In Tōge learned that his earlier diagnosis was wrong; he had bronchiectasis, an enlargement of the bronchial tube.[citation needed] During his illness and hospitalisation, his supporters raised funds to pay the fees for his medical expenses.[2]

    Tōge died on 10 March at the age of 36[5] at the National Hiroshima Sanatorium.[3]

    Legacy

    Tōge's poetry, especially that containing the vivid imagery describing the pain caused by the bomb, has been translated into many languages, and he is regarded as "the leading poet of atomic bomb".[2]

    A monument to Tōge was erected at on 6 August , which bears his most well known poem, Genbaku Shishu.[3][2]

    In the Association of Preservation Data on Hiroshima Literature received around 20 previously unpublished manuscripts from the nephew of Tōge, which included the draft of a plan to reconstruct Hiroshima.

    As it had accompanied the prizewinning essay mentioned above, there was still some uncertainty regarding its authorship.[4]

    Midnight in Broad Daylight (), by American historian Pamela Rotner Sakamoto, takes its title from a poem by Tōge.[6]

    Genbaku Shishu (Poems of the Atomic Bomb)

    Japanese

    (人間を返せ)

    Transcription

    (Ningen wo Kaese)

    English Translation

    by John McLean in Hiroshima Piano ()[7][8]

    English Translation

    at Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park (Monument Dedicated to Sankichi Tōge)[9][3]

    ちちをかえせ ははをかえせ
    としよりをかえせ
    こどもをかえせ
    わたしをかえせ わたしにつながる
    にんげんをかえせ
    にんげんの にんげんのよのあるかぎり
    くずれぬへいわを
    へいわをかえせ

    chichi o kaese haha o kaese
    toshi yori o kaese
    kodomo o kaese
    watashi o kaese watashi ni tsunagaru
    ningen o kaese
    ningen no ningen no yo no aru kagiri
    kuzurenu heiwa o
    heiwa o kaese

    Bring back my father!
    Bring back my mother!
    Bring back the elderly!
    Bring back the young!
    Bring back my life
    and the lives
    of those destined to me!
    Bring back
    all that is human,
    enduring peace.
    Bring back peace!

    Give back my father, give back my mother;
    Give grandpa back, grandma back;
    Give my sons and daughters back.
    Give me back myself,
    Give back the human race.
    As long as this life lasts, this life,
    Give back peace
    That will never end.

    See also

    References

    1. ^"Sankichi Toge Biography".

      See full list on howold.co Shakespeare is known to have created plays with other writers, such as John Fletcher. By he was writing poetry very different from his earlier efforts, as he became more politicised. There is also strong circumstantial evidence of personal relationships by contemporaries who interacted with Shakespeare as an actor and a playwright. Adrienne directs the daily news operation and content production for Biography.

      ArtNet. 27 June Retrieved 27 June

    2. ^ abcdefghiReece, Rachel (Spring ). Poems of Hiroshima: Translations of Children's Poems in When I was Small (Honors).

      Middle Tennessee State University.

      Sankichi toge biography of william shakespeare Their first child, a daughter they named Susanna, was born on May 26, In , Shakespeare purchased leases of real estate near Stratford for pounds, which doubled in value and earned him 60 pounds a year. Farewell: my blessing season this in thee! Initially, he was an actor and eventually devoted more and more time to writing.

      p.&#;,

    3. ^ abcde"Monument Dedicated to Sankichi Toge". 広島平和記念資料館. 6 August Retrieved 27 June
    4. ^ ab"Unpublished writings by Sankichi Toge, well-known A-bomb poet, are discovered".

      Hiroshima Peace Media Center. 9 January Archived from the original on 22 April

    5. ^Minear, Richard H., ed. (). "Poems of the Atomic Bomb by Tōge Sankichi: Translator's introduction".

      William Shakespeare Biography: Life, Works, and Legacy. Download Free Study Guide. The essay, which some later said had been written by his elder brother, was published in Chugoku Shimbun. The essay, which some later said had been written by his elder brother, was published in Chugoku Shimbun. Bring back

      Hiroshima: Three Witnesses. Princeton University Press. p.&#; doi/ JSTOR&#; Retrieved 27 June

    6. ^Skingle, Trevor (7 June ). "Book Review: Midnight in Broad Daylight". Diverse Japan.

    7. William Shakespeare - Playwright and Poet, Age, Wife ...
    8. William Shakespeare - Wikipedia
    9. Retrieved 27 June

    10. ^Hiroshima Piano ( Film), Motion Picture, Directed by Toshihiro Goto, Screened at Hiroshima International Film Festival
    11. ^田中 (7 November ). "国際映画祭、学生が字幕 安田女子大で通訳学ぶ30人、「プロの仕事」へ意識高める". 中国新聞.
    12. ^Yoshiteru Kosakai (), Hiroshima Peace Culture Foundation (ed.), Hiroshima Peace Reader (in German), translated by Akira und Michiko Tashiro, Robert und Alcie Ruth Ramseyser

    Further reading

    External links