Education
He graduated from the School of English Literature, Literature Department of Tokyo Imperial University.
霜多正次
He graduated from the School of English Literature, Literature Department of Tokyo Imperial University.
Born in Nakijin, Okinawa, he went to local elementary and middle schools, and then to a high school in Kumamoto, where one of his class mates was Haruo Umezaki. In 1940, he was conscripted and sent to Bougainville Island. Towards the end of the war, in May 1945, he surrendered to Australian forces and was sent to a Prisoner Of War camp.
After being released, he did not return to Okinawa (which at the time was occupied by the Americans), but went to Tokyo instead, where he wrote novels while working in the offices of Shin Nihon Bungakukai ("Society of the Literature of the New Japan"), a leftist writers" association.
In 1950, he published Kiyama ittō-hei to senkyōshi ("Private Kiyama and the Missionary") in the magazine "Shin Nihon Bungaku" and established himself as a writer In 1953, he returned for a visit for the first time after the war to Okinawa, and started using Okinawan themes in his writings.
In 1957, with fellow writers Tatsukichi Nishino, Kim Tal-su and Sei Kubota, he started the so-called Riarizumu Kenkyukai ("Realism Research Association"). After having some ideological disputes (among others about the Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty, he siding with the Japanese Communist Party views) with other executives of the Society at a conference in 1964, and after his relations soured with Teruo Takei, the de facto leader of the Society, and the people around him, he was expelled from the Society of the Literature of the New Japan.
When the Nippon minshushugi bungaku domei ("Japanese Democratic Literary Alliance") was established in 1965, he was named vice-chairman.
In 1971, he was awarded the Takiji-Yuriko Award for Akemodoro. He died of pneumonia in Musashino, Tokyo, on April 16, 2003.