翻訳と辞書
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・ Kōji Ishii
・ Kōji Ishizaka
・ Kōji Kamibayashi
・ Kōji Kikkawa
・ Kōji Kiriyama
・ Kōji Kitao
・ Kōji Kobayashi
・ Kōji Kobayashi (boxer)
・ Kōji Kojima
・ Kōji Kumeta
・ Kōji Makaino
・ Kōji Mitsui
・ Kōji Morimoto
・ Kōji Morisaki
・ Kōji Morooka
Kōji Nakano
・ Kōji Nakata
・ Kōji Nakata (disambiguation)
・ Kōji Nanbara
・ Kōji Ochiai
・ Kōji Ogata
・ Kōji Saitō
・ Kōji Saitō (photographer)
・ Kōji Sakai
・ Kōji Satō (photographer)
・ Kōji Seki
・ Kōji Seo
・ Kōji Seto
・ Kōji Shimizu
・ Kōji Shiraishi


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Kōji Nakano : ウィキペディア英語版
Kōji Nakano

was a Japanese novelist, translator of German literature and literary critic in Shōwa period Japan.
==Biography==
Nakano was born in Ichikawa, Chiba Prefecture, as the son of a carpenter. He was a graduate of the German literature department of Tokyo University in 1950. From 1952 to 1981, he worked as a professor at Kokugakuin University.
Nakano was noted for his translations of the works of Franz Kafka and Hans Erich Nossack into the Japanese language.
In 1976, he published a collection of essays, ''Buryugeru e no tabi'' (“Journey to Bruegel”), which won the Japan Essayist’s Club Award. He followed this with an autobiographical series of books: ''Mugi Uru hi ni'' (“When the Wheat Ripens”, 1978), which was awarded the Hirabayashi Taiko Literary Prize. Other noteworthy works include ''Nigai Natsu'' (“Bitter Summer”, 1979) ad ''Kisetsu no owari'' (“The End of the Season”, 1980). Nakano won numerous literary awards in his career, cumulating with the Japan Art Academy Award in 2004.



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