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    • Japanese novelist and essayist

      • Kenji Nakagami (中上健次, Nakagami Kenji, August 2, 1946 – August 12, 1992) was a Japanese novelist and essayist. He is well known as the first, and so far the only, post-war Japanese writer to identify himself publicly as a Burakumin, a member of one of Japan's long-suffering outcaste groups.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenji_Nakagami
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  2. Kenji Nakagami (中上健次, Nakagami Kenji, August 2, 1946 – August 12, 1992) was a Japanese novelist and essayist. He is well known as the first, and so far the only, post-war Japanese writer to identify himself publicly as a Burakumin, a member of one of Japan's long-suffering outcaste groups.

  3. Nakagami Kenji (born Aug. 2, 1946, Shingū, Wakayama prefecture, Japan—died Aug. 12, 1992, Wakayama prefecture) was a prolific Japanese novelist whose writing was deeply influenced by his upbringing in a burakumin family.

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  4. Aug 12, 1992 · Kenji Nakagami (中上健次 Nakagami Kenji, August 2, 1946 – August 12, 1992) was a Japanese novelist and essayist. He is well known as the first, and so far the only, post-war Japanese writer to identify himself publicly as a Burakumin, a member of one of Japan’s long-suffering outcaste groups.

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    • August 12, 1992
    • August 2, 1946
  5. Kenji Nakagami (中上健次 Nakagami Kenji, August 2, 1946 – August 12, 1992) was a Japanese novelist and essayist. He is well known as the first, and so far the only, post-war Japanese writer to identify himself publicly as a Burakumin, a member of one of Japan’s long-suffering outcaste groups.

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    • Kenji Nakagami
  6. Aug 14, 1992 · Kenji Nakagami, novelist, born Shingu Japan 1946, died Wakayama 12 August 1992. EVER SINCE early childhood, he had known he was an outcast. But he was an outcast determined to make...

  7. Twenty-nine-year-old Kenji Nakagami was working as a baggage handler at Haneda Airport in 1976 when his novella, "The Cape," was awarded the Akutagawa Sho, Japan's premier literary prize. Nakagami, who was born into Japan's outcast burakumin society, was the first in his family to "get letters."

  8. Novelist Nakagami Kenji (to give his name in its usual Japanese order, family name first) was for much of two decades from the early 1970s seen as the great hope on the Japanese literary horizon, the renewer of prose fiction.

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