Ōoka Shōhei

Japanese author
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Quick Facts
Born:
March 6, 1909, Tokyo, Japan
Died:
Dec. 25, 1988, Tokyo

Ōoka Shōhei (born March 6, 1909, Tokyo, Japan—died Dec. 25, 1988, Tokyo) was a Japanese novelist famous for his depiction of the fate of Japanese soldiers during World War II.

Ōoka studied French literature at Kyoto University and was profoundly influenced as a writer by Stendhal, whose works he translated into Japanese. Ōoka was drafted in 1944, fought in the Philippines, and was captured by U.S. soldiers in 1945. His first novel, Furyoki (1948; “Prisoner of War”), reflects these experiences. His best-known novel is Nobi (1951; Fires on the Plain; filmed 1952), which tells the story of Tamura, a sick Japanese soldier wandering in the Philippine jungles in the aftermath of the war who eventually goes mad and is saved by his Christian faith. The novel was widely translated and ranks with the finest works of war literature. Kaei (1958–59; “Under the Shadow of the Cherry Blossoms”) is a story of a prostitute’s suicide. Ōoka also published several collections of essays.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.