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Location and site outline. Tsuji District, distant viewJR Sakurai Line Makimuku Station at the back of the building remains. To the rear left is Mount Miwa and to the far right is the Hashihaka Kofun.
Tsuji often made ends meet by going door to door as a busking shakuhachi musician. However, in 1944, Tsuji settled down in a friend's one-bedroom apartment in Tokyo, where he was found dead from starvation. Tsuji is now buried in Tokyo's Saifuku Temple. [13]
Oct 4, 2024 · Tsuji is now buried in Tokyo's Saifuku Temple. [13] Tsuji is remembered for having helped found Dadaism in Japan along with contemporaries such as Murayama Tomoyoshi , MAVO, Yoshiyuki Eisuke , and Takahashi Shinkichi .
May 12, 2018 · Sengaku-ji temple in Minato-ku is the place where the forty-seven rōnin are buried and is most closely conected to the Akō incident. However, Kannon-ji is the temple where the revenge murder was plotted .
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Jun Tsuji, later Ryūkitsu Mizushima (辻 潤 Tsuji Jun?, October 4, 1884 – November 24, 1944) was a Japanese author: a poet, essayist, playwright, and translator. He has also been described as a Dadaist, nihilist, epicurean, shakuhachi musician, actor, feminist, and bohemian. He translated Max Stirner's The Ego and Its Own and Cesare Lombroso's The Man of Genius into Japanese.
Tōkyō-born Tsuji Jun sought escape in literature from a childhood he described as "nothing but destitution, hardship, and a series of traumatizing difficulties". He became interested in Tolstoyan Humanism, Kōtoku Shūsui's socialist anarchism, and the literature of Oscar Wilde and Voltaire, among many others. Later, in 1920 Tsuji was introduced to Dada and became a self-proclaimed first Dadaist of Japan, a title also claimed by Tsuji's contemporary, Takahashi Shinkichi (高橋 新吉). Tsuji became a fervent proponent of Stirnerite Egoist anarchism, which would become a point of contention between himself and Takahashi. He wrote one of the prologues for famed feminist poet Hayashi Fumiko's 1929 I Saw a Pale Horse (『蒼馬を見たり』 (Ao Uma wo Mitari?) and was active in the radical artistic and political circles of his time.
Tsuji wrote during the 1920s, a dangerous period in Japanese history for controversial writers, during which he experienced the wages of censorship through police harassment. He also experienced this vicariously through the persecution of his close associates such as his former wife, anarcho-feminist Ito Noe, who was murdered in the Amakasu Incident. In 1932 Tsuji was institutionalized in a psychiatric hospital after what would become known as the "Tengu Incident". He was diagnosed as having experienced a temporary psychosis probably resulting from his chronic alcoholism. Thereafter the once prolific Tsuji gave up his writing career, and he returned to his custom of vagabondage in the fashion of a Komusō monk. He is remembered for having helped found Dadaism in Japan along with contemporaries such as Murayama Tomoyoshi, MAVO, Yoshiyuki Eisuke, and Takahashi Shinkichi. Moreover, he was one of the most prominent Japanese contributors to Nihilist philosophy prior to World War II. He is also remembered as the father of prominent Japanese painter, Makoto Tsuji (辻 まこと). Tsuji is now buried in Tokyo's Saifuku Temple.
Tsuji was depicted in the 1969 film Eros Plus Massacre and has been the subject of several Japanese books and articles. Tsuji's friend and contemporary anarchist, Hagiwara Kyōjirō (萩原 恭次郎), described Tsuji as follows:
This person, “Tsuji Jun”, is the most interesting figure in Japan today... He is like a commandment-breaking monk, like Christ...
•Select e-texts of Tsuji's works. at Aozora bunko (Japanese)
•Tsuji Jun no Hibiki. (Japanese)
Aug 13, 2020 · On the large terraced hillside overlooking the skyscrapers of Osaka City, one can see countless rows of traditional three-tier graves in which the cremains of several generations of family members are interred. Most inscriptions on them say “X family’s ancestral grave.”.
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Oct 4, 2022 · Nestled in the mountains of Wakayama prefecture a couple of hours southeast of Osaka, Japan by car lies a world-famous cemetery that is home to the graves of over 200,000 Buddhist monks who are said to be waiting for the resurrection of the Future Buddha. Nearly 1.24 miles (2 kilometers) long, Okunoin cemetery is the biggest in Japan.