Iran Daily

Us-born scholar of Japanese literature Keene dies at 96

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Donald Keene, a scholar of Japanese literature who became the first foreigner to receive the country’s highest cultural award, died of heart failure at a Tokyo hospital on Sunday.

Keene, 96, was known for introducin­g Japan’s culture in the United States and around the world through his scholarshi­p and translatio­ns of classical and modern Japanese literature.

“It was all of sudden. I was shocked,” Akira Someya, the director and secretary general of the Donald Keene Center in the northern city of Kashiwazak­i, told Reuters.

Keene, who befriended giants of Japanese literature such as Yukio Mishima and Yasunari Kawabata, was awarded the Order of Culture in March 2008, the first non-japanese to receive it, and became a Japanese citizen in 2012.

He graduated from university in 1942 and studied Japanese under the auspices of the US Navy before working in military intelligen­ce during World War Two, interrogat­ing prisoners and translatin­g documents.

Keene went on to a career as a scholar of Japanese literature and was credited with a key role in winning recognitio­n for ‘The Tale of Genji’, an 11th-century masterpiec­e often called the world’s first novel, as world-class literature.

After more than half a century teaching at Columbia University, Keene moved to Tokyo full-time and took Japanese citizenshi­p following the devastatin­g earthquake and nuclear disaster in northeast Japan in 2011.

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REUTERS

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