Kawabata Yasunari's deeds and his aesthetic view.

Japanese neo-sensualist writer and famous novelist. Born in Osaka. His parents died when he was very young, and so did his grandparents and sister. He has been wandering all his life, depressed and depressed, and gradually formed a sentimental and withdrawn character. This kind of inner pain and sadness has become a deep shadow of Kawabata Yasunari's literature. When I was studying Chinese at the University of Tokyo, I participated in the reissue of the magazine New Trend of Thought (No.6). 1924 graduated. In the same year, he founded Literature Times magazine with Yoko Hiroshi, and later became one of the central figures of the new sensation school born from it. After the decline of Neo-sensualism, he joined the Art Nouveau and the New Psychological Literature Movement, and wrote more than 100 novels in his life, with more short stories than long ones. His works are lyrical and pursue the lofty beauty of life, which is deeply influenced by Buddhist thought and nihilism. In the early days, many lower-class women were the protagonists of novels, writing about their purity and misfortune. Later, some works were written about the abnormal love psychology between close relatives and even the elderly, which was skillful and natural. The famous novel Dancer of Izu (1926) describes the miserable life of a high school student and a tramp. The representative work Snow Country (1935 ~ 1937) describes the physical and mental purity and beauty of women at the bottom of the snow country, as well as the writer's deep sense of nothingness. Other works include Asakusa Red Ball (1929 ~ 1930), Crystal Fantasy (193 1) and Thousand Crane (1949 ~ 195 1). Yasunari Kawabata served as the vice president of the International PEN and the president of the Japanese PEN. 1957 was elected as a member of the Japanese Academy of Arts. He was awarded the Cultural Medal of the Japanese Government and the Cultural and Art Medal of the French Government. "Expressed the Japanese spiritual essence with extraordinary sharpness", 1968 won the Nobel Prize in Literature. Many works have been translated and published in China. Three years after obtaining Nobel Prize in Literature, Yasunari Kawabata died suddenly in April of 1972 and 16, and Yasunari Kawabata did not leave a suicide note. It is said that because of Yukio Mishima's suicide, he was so stimulated that he finally chose to commit suicide. )