. "Kambayashi Akatsuki"@de . . . . . . . . "Akatsuki Kambayashi (\u4E0A\u6797 \u6681, Kambayashi Akatsuki), nom v\u00E9ritable Tokuhiro Iwaki (\u5FB3\u5EE3\u5DCC\u57CE), n\u00E9 le 6 octobre 1902 dans le village de Tanokuchi, district de Hata (aujourd\u2019hui Kuroshio dans la pr\u00E9fecture de K\u014Dchi), au Japon, et mort le 28 ao\u00FBt 1980, est un \u00E9crivain japonais."@fr . "Kambayashi Akatsuki (jap. \u4E0A\u6797 \u6681, b\u00FCrgerlich: Tokuhiro Iwaki (\u5FB3\u5EE3 \u5DCC\u57CE, vereinfacht auch: \u5FB3\u5E83 \u5DCC\u57CE); * 6. Oktober 1902 in Tanokuchi, (heute: ), Pr\u00E4fektur K\u014Dchi; \u2020 28. August 1980) war ein japanischer Schriftsteller."@de . . . "2011-07-16"^^ . "\u4E0A\u6797 \u6681\uFF08\u4E0A\u6797 \u66C9\u3001\u304B\u3093\u3070\u3084\u3057 \u3042\u304B\u3064\u304D\u30011902\u5E74\uFF08\u660E\u6CBB35\u5E74\uFF0910\u67086\u65E5 - 1980\u5E74\uFF08\u662D\u548C55\u5E74\uFF098\u670828\u65E5\uFF09\u306F\u3001\u65E5\u672C\u306E\u5C0F\u8AAC\u5BB6\u3067\u3001\u662D\u548C\u671F\u3092\u4EE3\u8868\u3059\u308B\u79C1\u5C0F\u8AAC\u4F5C\u5BB6\u306E\u4E00\u4EBA\u3002\u9AD8\u77E5\u770C\u51FA\u8EAB\u3002\u672C\u540D\u306F\u5FB3\u5EE3\u5DCC\u57CE\uFF08\u3068\u304F\u3072\u308D \u3044\u308F\u304D\uFF09\u3002\u300E\u8594\u8587\u76D7\u4EBA\u300F\u3067\u767B\u5834\u3001\u305D\u306E\u5F8C\u79C1\u5C0F\u8AAC\u306B\u6D3B\u8DEF\u3092\u62D3\u304D\u3001\u300E\u8056\u30E8\u30CF\u30CD\u75C5\u9662\u306B\u3066\u300F\u306A\u3069\u306E\u75C5\u59BB\u7269\u3067\u9AD8\u3044\u8A55\u4FA1\u3092\u53D7\u3051\u305F\u3002"@ja . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "25573962"^^ . . . . "Kambayashi Akatsuki (jap. \u4E0A\u6797 \u6681, b\u00FCrgerlich: Tokuhiro Iwaki (\u5FB3\u5EE3 \u5DCC\u57CE, vereinfacht auch: \u5FB3\u5E83 \u5DCC\u57CE); * 6. Oktober 1902 in Tanokuchi, (heute: ), Pr\u00E4fektur K\u014Dchi; \u2020 28. August 1980) war ein japanischer Schriftsteller."@de . . . . . . "2063"^^ . . "1107877396"^^ . . "\u4E0A\u6797\u6681"@ja . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Akatsuki Kambayashi (\u4E0A\u6797 \u6681, Kambayashi Akatsuki), nom v\u00E9ritable Tokuhiro Iwaki (\u5FB3\u5EE3\u5DCC\u57CE), n\u00E9 le 6 octobre 1902 dans le village de Tanokuchi, district de Hata (aujourd\u2019hui Kuroshio dans la pr\u00E9fecture de K\u014Dchi), au Japon, et mort le 28 ao\u00FBt 1980, est un \u00E9crivain japonais."@fr . "\u4E0A\u6797 \u6681\uFF08\u4E0A\u6797 \u66C9\u3001\u304B\u3093\u3070\u3084\u3057 \u3042\u304B\u3064\u304D\u30011902\u5E74\uFF08\u660E\u6CBB35\u5E74\uFF0910\u67086\u65E5 - 1980\u5E74\uFF08\u662D\u548C55\u5E74\uFF098\u670828\u65E5\uFF09\u306F\u3001\u65E5\u672C\u306E\u5C0F\u8AAC\u5BB6\u3067\u3001\u662D\u548C\u671F\u3092\u4EE3\u8868\u3059\u308B\u79C1\u5C0F\u8AAC\u4F5C\u5BB6\u306E\u4E00\u4EBA\u3002\u9AD8\u77E5\u770C\u51FA\u8EAB\u3002\u672C\u540D\u306F\u5FB3\u5EE3\u5DCC\u57CE\uFF08\u3068\u304F\u3072\u308D \u3044\u308F\u304D\uFF09\u3002\u300E\u8594\u8587\u76D7\u4EBA\u300F\u3067\u767B\u5834\u3001\u305D\u306E\u5F8C\u79C1\u5C0F\u8AAC\u306B\u6D3B\u8DEF\u3092\u62D3\u304D\u3001\u300E\u8056\u30E8\u30CF\u30CD\u75C5\u9662\u306B\u3066\u300F\u306A\u3069\u306E\u75C5\u59BB\u7269\u3067\u9AD8\u3044\u8A55\u4FA1\u3092\u53D7\u3051\u305F\u3002"@ja . "Akatsuki Kambayashi (\u4E0A\u6797 \u6681, Kambayashi Akatsuki, October 6, 1902 - August 28, 1980), pseudonym of Tokohiro Iwaki, was a noted Japanese author in the I Novel genre. Kambayashi was born in a village now part of Kuroshio in K\u014Dchi Prefecture. In 1927 he received a graduate degree in English literate from the University of Tokyo and took a job with the Kaizo publishing company. That same year he began to write and continued until 1973, despite two debilitating strokes. Kambayashi received the 1964 Yomiuri Prize for Shiroi yakatabune, and in 1969 became a member of the Japan Art Academy."@en . "Akatsuki Kambayashi"@en . . . . . . . "Akatsuki Kambayashi (\u4E0A\u6797 \u6681, Kambayashi Akatsuki, October 6, 1902 - August 28, 1980), pseudonym of Tokohiro Iwaki, was a noted Japanese author in the I Novel genre. Kambayashi was born in a village now part of Kuroshio in K\u014Dchi Prefecture. In 1927 he received a graduate degree in English literate from the University of Tokyo and took a job with the Kaizo publishing company. That same year he began to write and continued until 1973, despite two debilitating strokes. All told, Kambayashi published more than two hundred stories, most of which are based on personal experiences. According to Donald Keene, these stories fall into three broad clusters: those set in the village of Shikoku where he grew up; those relating to the illness and madness of his wife; and those describing his younger sister. Perhaps the best known is Sei Yohane by\u014Din nite (In the Hospital of St. John, 1946), in which describes the slow death of his wife in the middle of a war-torn country. Kambayashi received the 1964 Yomiuri Prize for Shiroi yakatabune, and in 1969 became a member of the Japan Art Academy."@en . . . . "Akatsuki Kambayashi"@fr . . . .