Kōichi Iijima
Kōichi Iijima was a Japanese poet, novelist, and translator. He was a member of the Japan Art Academy.
Born in Okayama City, Iijima graduated from the French Literature Department of Tokyo University. While in university he established together with, among others, Isamu Kurita the magazine Cahier. In 1956, he and Makoto Ōoka were among the founders of the Surrealism Research Society.
In 1953, he published his first collection of poems, Tanin no sora. In 2008, he was elected a member of the Japan Art Academy. He also worked as a professor at Meiji University and Kokugakuin University. He translated or wrote about Henri Barbusse, Antonin Artaud, Brassaï, Joan Miró i Ferrà, Henry Miller, Marcel Aymé, Guillaume Apollinaire, etc.
He is the father of architecture critic Yōichi Iijima.
He died on October 14, 2013, at a Tokyo hospital of malabsorption syndrome.Awards
- Takami Jun Award for ゴヤのファースト・ネームは
- Tōson kinen rekitei Award for 飯島耕一詩集
- Gendai shijin Award for 夜を夢想する小太陽の独言
- Bunkamura Prix des Deux Magots for 暗殺百美人
- Yomiuri Prize for アメリカ
- Nihon gendai ishika bungakukan Award