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  1. Tekkan Yosano (与謝野 鉄幹 or 與謝野 鐵幹, Yosano Tekkan, 26 February 1873 – 26 March 1935) was the pen-name of Yosano Hiroshi, a Japanese author and poet active in late Meiji, Taishō, and early Shōwa period Japan.

  2. Tekkan Yosano, a Japanese author and poet working under the pen name Yosano Hiroshi, who advocated for the reform of Japanese poetry, was also responsible for bringing the first Parisian Cubist artworks to public view in Tokyo in 1913.

  3. Tekkan Yosano (与謝野 鉄幹 Yosano Tekkan?, February 26, 1873 - March 26, 1935) was the pen-name of Yosano Hiroshi, a Japanese author and poet active in late Meiji, Taishō and early Shōwa period Japan.

  4. Novelist and poet. In 1892 he moved to Tokyo and studied under Ochiai Naobumi, and participated in the poet's group Asaka-sha, which was set up next year. He published the poetry collections Tozai Nanboku (East, West, North and South) in 1896 and Tenchi Genko (Colors of Heaven and Earth) in 1897.

  5. This book tells the story of the turbulent lives of Tekkan Yosano (18731935) and Akiko Yosano (18781942), two poets who sparked a revolution in the world of Japanese tanka ("short-verse" classical poetry) and the passion of the various young poets around them.

  6. Akiko Yosano (1878–1942) is best known for her seminal tanka collection, Midaregami (Tangled Hair). Born near Osaka, she is said to have written 40,000 tanka in her sixty-four years (that’s two to three tanka every day for her entire adult life).

  7. A los veinte años, gracias a Tekkan Yosano, quien después se convertiría en su esposo, comenzó a escribir tankas, un tipo de poesía japonesa que se compone de cinco versos con la estructura de 5-7-5-7-7 sílabas.