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Hidemi Kon

Hidemi Kon
Kon Hidemi.jpg
Kon Hidemi
Native name 今 日出海
Born (1903-11-06)6 November 1903
Hakodate, Hokkaidō, Japan
Died 30 July 1984(1984-07-30) (aged 80)
Kamakura, Japan
Resting place Catholic Cemetery, Kamakura, Japan
Occupation Writer and literary critic
Language Japanese
Alma mater Tokyo Imperial University
Genre essayist and literary criticism, short stories

Hidemi Kon (今 日出海 Kon Hidemi?, 6 November 1903 – 30 July 1984) was a literary critic and essayist active in Japan during the Shōwa period.

Born in Hakodate, Hokkaidō, Kon Hidemi was the younger brother of writer, politician and Buddhist priest Kon Tōkō. His father was a captain of a steamer operated by Nippon Yusen, and the family relocated to Kobe from 1911. Kon moved to Tokyo in 1918, and was accepted into the French Literature Department of Tokyo Imperial University. His classmates included Hideo Kobayashi and Tatsuji Miyoshi, During this period, he became interested in drama, visiting the Tsukiji New Theater, and took part in stage plays as a member of the Kokoroza, a theatrical company created by kabuki and stage actors as an effort to create a more modern version of traditional Japanese theater. One of its members was Tomoyoshi Murayama, and Saburō Moroi assisted with the music.

After graduation, Kon obtained part-time jobs at a number of literary magazines, including Bungei Shuto and Bungakukai, providing essays, translations of André Gide, and literary criticism. He was hired as a lecturer by Meiji University in 1932. However, he quit in 1935 to devote his attentions to the direct the movie Dancing Girl of the Peninsula (Hanto no Maihime), starring Choi Seung-hee at the new Shinkō Kinema. He also wrote the screenplay for the movie. Kon visited Paris for half of 1937, and returned to his former position at Meiji University in 1939. During the Second Sino-Japanese War, he maintained a correspondence with Mu Shiying, a Chinese writer who hoped that cultural exchange would help bring peace to Asia.


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