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・ Kazuo Uchida
・ Kazuo Umezu
・ Kazuo Uzuki
・ Kazuo Yamada
・ Kazuo Yamaguchi
・ Kazuo Yamazaki
・ Kazuo Yoshimura
・ Kazuoki
・ Kazuoki Azuma
・ Kazuoki Kodama
・ Kazumi Saeki
・ Kazumi Saito
・ Kazumi Sakai
・ Kazumi Tabata
・ Kazumi Takada
Kazumi Takahashi
・ Kazumi Tanaka
・ Kazumi Totaka
・ Kazumi Tsubota
・ Kazumi Watanabe
・ Kazumi Watanabe (sport shooter)
・ Kazumi Yamashita
・ Kazumi Yamashita (artist)
・ Kazumichi Takada
・ Kazumichi Takagi
・ Kazumori Koike
・ Kazumoto Machijiri
・ Kazumura Cave
・ Kazunari
・ Kazunari Abe


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Kazumi Takahashi : ウィキペディア英語版
Kazumi Takahashi

was a Japanese novelist and scholar of Chinese literature in Shōwa period Japan. His wife was fellow writer Takako Takahashi.
==Biography==
Takahashi was born in Naniwa-ku, Osaka, and was a graduate of Kyoto University. While still a student, he contributed to the ''Gendai Bungaku'' literary magazine. He was encouraged to study the Chinese language and Chinese history by fellow writer Eiji Yoshikawa. He became a professor at Ritsumeikan University in Kyoto in 1959. During the widespread violent student protest movements in the 1960s against the Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security between the United States and Japan, Takahashi was an outspoken supporter of the radical student movement. He moved to Meiji University briefly in 1966 before returning to Kyoto University in 1967.
His novel, ''Hi no utsuwa'' (“Vessel of Sadness”, 1962), depicts the fall of a university dean from respectability due to his self-centered love affairs. Other works include ''Yuutsu naru Toha'' (“A Melancholy Faction”, 1965) and ''Jashumon'' (“Heretical Faith”, 1965–66).
Takahashi died of colon cancer at the young age of 39. His grave is at the Fuji Reien Cemetery in Shizuoka Prefecture.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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