U.S.-born scholar of Japanese literature
Donald Keene dies at 96
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[February 25, 2019]
TOKYO
(Reuters) - Donald Keene, a scholar of Japanese literature who became
the first foreigner to receive the country's highest cultural award,
died of heart failure at a Tokyo hospital on Sunday.
Keene, 96, was known for introducing Japan's culture in the United
States and around the world through his scholarship and translations of
classical and modern Japanese literature.
"It was all of sudden. I was shocked," Akira Someya, the director and
secretary-general of the Donald Keene Centre in the northern city of
Kashiwazaki, told Reuters. |
Donald Keene shows off a placard with his name written in Japanese at
Tokyo's Kita ward office after becoming a Japanese citizen in Tokyo,
Japan, in this photo taken by Kyodo March 8, 2012. Mandatory credit
Kyodo/via REUTERS |
Keene, who befriended giants of Japanese literature such as
Yukio Mishima and Yasunari Kawabata, was awarded the Order of
Culture in March 2008, the first non-Japanese to receive it, and
became a Japanese citizen in 2012.
He graduated from university in 1942 and studied Japanese under
the auspices of the U.S. Navy before working in military
intelligence during World War Two, interrogating prisoners and
translating documents.
Keene went on to a career as a scholar of Japanese literature
and was credited with a key role in winning recognition for "The
Tale of Genji", an 11th-century masterpiece often called the
world's first novel, as world-class literature.
After more than half a century teaching at Columbia University,
Keene moved to Tokyo full-time and took Japanese citizenship
following the devastating earthquake and nuclear disaster in
northeast Japan in 2011.
(Reporting by Tetsushi Kajimoto; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
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