On Kenzaburo Oe's Creation and Analysis of His Works

The life of Japanese writer Kenzaburo Oe. 1935 1 Month 3 1 Day, Kenzaburo Oe was born in osawa Village, Xiduo County, Ehime Prefecture, Shikoku Island, Japan, ranking third among the seven brothers. 194 1 entered the national studies competition in, 1944 lost his father. After the war, Kenzaburo Oe entered the new middle school established after 1947 to receive democratic education, and took the new constitution promulgated in May of the same year as his moral standard. 1950 entered Neizi Senior High School in the county, and transferred to Shandong Senior High School in the county the following year. At school, he edited Pocket, a student literature magazine. 1953 Kenzaburo Oe went to Tokyo after graduating from high school and entered a cram school to prepare for the college entrance examination. /kloc-in 0/954, he was admitted to the liberal arts department of Tokyo University and was keen on reading the works of Camus, Sartre, Faulkner and Abe's public houses. 1955 entered the French major of Tokyo University. Under the influence of Professor Watanabe, he began to read Sartre's original French works, and created the plays The Dead Man Has No Mouth and The Voice of the Beast. Kenzaburo Oe actively engaged in literary activities, published "Wonderful Flowers" in the May issue of Tokyo University News 1957 and won the "May Festival Award" of the newspaper. When Qian, a famous literary critic, talked about this short story in Literary Review, he thought it was a "work of art with modern consciousness". During this year, Kenzaburo Oe also published short stories such as The Luxury of the Dead, People's Sheep and Others' Feet, among which The Luxury of the Dead was recommended as a candidate for the Akutagawa Prize, and the famous writer Yasunari Kawabata praised the work for showing the author's "extraordinary talent". Since then, Kenzaburo Oe has emerged as a student writer. 1958, he also published short stories such as Feeding and Jumping Forward, among which Feeding won the 39th Akutagawa Prize, making this student writer as famous as Shintaro Ishihara, Keck and Eto Jun, and regarded as a symbol and representative of literature in the new period. The first novel, Picking Vegetables and Beating Children, which was published later, decisively put him in the position of standard-bearer of new literature.