Kajiyama Toshiyuki
Toshiyuki Kajiyama | |
---|---|
Kajiyama Toshiyuki | |
Born |
Seoul, Korea | 2 January 1930
Died |
11 November 1975 45) Hong Kong | (aged
Occupation | Journalist |
Genre | novels |
Literary movement | mystery novel, spy novel |
Kajiyama Toshiyuki (梶山 季之, 2 January 1930 – 11 November 1975) was a Japanese novelist active during the Shōwa period of Japan. He was known for his popular novels, which primarily consisted of mysteries and erotica.
Early life
Kajiyama was born in Keijo (present day Seoul) in Japanese-occupied Korea, where his father was a civil engineer. He lived in Korea to the end of World War II, when he was repatriated together with his parents to his father's home town of Hatsukaichi, in Hiroshima Prefecture. He was a graduate of the Hiroshima Normal School (the predecessor to Hiroshima University). After graduation, he worked as an investigative reporter, and submitted short stories and small articles to literary magazines such as Shukan Shincho and Shukan Bunshun. In 1961, Kajiyama was hospitalized for three months with tuberculosis.
Literary career
In 1962, Kajiyama published his first novel, Kuro no shisosha (“The Black Test Model”), which he wrote in a documentary style. The novel was an all-time bestseller in Japan for several years, and started the genre of the industrial espionage novel in Japan. The story involves two motor companies vying to produce a new sports car. The intense competition in the Japanese automobile industry causes the companies to resort to industrial espionage to gain an advantage. The protagonist of the story even sacrifices his girlfriend in order to beat the other company. However, eventually he realizes the futility of sacrificing his personal life for the uncaring corporation, which regards him as only a disposable cog in a huge machine. The novel was made into a motion picture by Daiei Motion Picture Company in 1962, directed by Yasuzo Masumura. Its success was such that Daiei subsequently released ten more thriller-action films with similar themes, each using the word "black" in its title. Kajiyama also followed up on the novel’s success with a number of bestsellers, including a series of “Police Woman” novels which were serialized in the Shukan Shincho magazine in 1966. By 1969, he was one of the highest paid authors in Japan. However, in 1972, he had a relapse of his tuberculosis, and retired to his villa in Izu, from which he continued to write, and to participate in the activities of the Japanese chapter of the PEN International.
However, few of Kajiyama's popular novels have been translated into English, and he is known more in the West for his works on Korea under Japanese rule. Kajiyama was awarded the Naoki Prize, a prestigious literary prize, in 1963 for a work on Korea: Richo zanei 李朝残影 ("Shadows of the Yi Dynasty”).
In 1965 he began serializing a novel about Soka Gakkai, but a flood of complaints from Soka Gakkai supporters caused the editor of the magazine so much stress that he went missing; the series was never completed.
Kajiyama died suddenly of cirrhosis of the liver while at a hotel in Hong Kong, where he was researching materials for a new book.
After his death, his library was donated to the University of Hawaii at Manoa. Because of his background, Kajiyama was attracted both to the culture and people of Korea and the question of Japanese overseas migration. He collected more than 1,000 volumes of materials, some of which were classified documents of the Government-General of Korea in preparation of an epic on the history of Japanese migration, but the project was never completed due to his untimely early death.
See also
References and reading
- Kajiyama, Toshiyuki. The Clan Records: Five Stories of Korea translated by Yoshiko Dykstra。University of Hawaii Press (1995). ISBN 0-8248-1532-7