Saburō Shiroyama

Japanese novelist
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroJapanese novelist
PlacesJapan
wasWriter Novelist
Work fieldLiterature
Gender
Male
Birth18 August 1927, Nagoya, Aichi Prefecture, Japan
Death22 March 2007Chigasaki, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan (aged 79 years)
Star signLeo
Education
Hitotsubashi University
Awards
Kikuchi Kan Prize1996
Yoshikawa Eiji Prize for Literature1975
The details

Biography

Saburō Shiroyama

Saburō Shiroyama (城山三郎, b. Eiichi Sugiura) (1927–2007) is a Japanese novelist.

Shiroyama was born in Aichi Prefecture, and studied economics at Hitotsubashi University. He later taught economics at Nagoya Gakuin University. Shiroyama trained as a pilot for the Japanese Navy, but never saw active service. He began his writing career after the end of World War II.

Many of his works concern shoshamen, high-level industry executives within Japanese corporate culture. He is known to have used real people, such as Sahashi Shigeru, as the basis for such characters, though he tried to avoid actually meeting or interviewing these subjects.

In 1957 he won the Bungakukai New Writers award for Export (Yushutsu), which established the economic novel (keizai shosetsu) as a mainstream literary form in Japan. He also won the Naoki Prize for Sōkaiya Kinjō in 1958.

Major works

Some of Shiyoyama's most notable works include:

  • Export (1957)
  • Made in Japan (1959)
  • Price Slashing (1969)
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