Shintarō Ishihara


Shintarō Ishihara (Japanese: 石 原 慎 太郎, Ishihara Shintarō, born September 30, 1932 in Kobe) is a Japanese politician and writer. Ishihara was born in Kobe but grew up in Zushi. He studied at Hitotsubashi University in 1952-1956.

He received a prestigious prize for them. Akutagawa for the novel Taiyō no kisetsu (The Sun, 1956). This is a story about youth without ideals, lost in the initial period of prosperity. It was filmed by Takumi Furukawa (played by the younger brother of the writer, Yūjirō). He also wrote: Kurutta kajitsu (Crazy Fruit, 1956), Umi no chizu (Map of the Sea, 1958), Kaseki no mori (Fossil Forest, 1970). Noise to Nihon (Japan That Can Say No, 1989). Ishihara used his literary popularity to take up his political career. In 1968, the Liberal Democratic Party was elected to the House of Representatives and then to the House of Representatives four years later.

In the years 1999-2012 he was governor of Tokyo. Bibliography

wiki

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