Jump to content

Yang Sok-il

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Dead.rabbit (talk | contribs) at 06:17, 22 February 2016 (Persondata has been deprecated by this RfC). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Yang Sok-il
Hangul
양석일
Hanja
Revised RomanizationYang Seok-il
McCune–ReischauerYang Sŏgil
Japanese name:
Yanagawa Masao ()

Yang Sok-il (or Yang Sokil, Yang Sogil, Yang Seok-il, born 13 August 1936) is a writer in Japanese of Korean nationality. He was born in Osaka.

Yang first supported himself via various odd jobs, an experience that led to books based on the experience of taxi driving published in the 1980s and filmed as All Under the Moon (月はどっちに出ている, Tsuki wa dotchi ni dete iru Yōichi Sai). A large number of books followed.

The December 2000 issue of Yurīka (ユリイカ) / Eureka is devoted to Yang.[1]

Yang's semi-autobiographical novel, Chi to Hone (Blood and Bones), was adapted as a theatrical film, directed by Yoichi Sai, starring Takeshi Kitano as Kim Shun-Pei, Kyoka Suzuki as Kim's wife, Joe Odagiri as son-in-law and Hirofumi Arai as eldest son and narrator. The film opened in Japan on 6 November 2004.

Notes

External links