Ryû Murakami

Writer

Popular As Ryunosuke Murakami

Birthday February 19, 1952

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace Sasebo, Nagasaki, Japan

Age 72 years old

Nationality Japan

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Ryū Murakami (村上 龍) is a Japanese novelist, short story writer, essayist and filmmaker.

His novels explore human nature through themes of disillusion, drug use, surrealism, murder and war, set against the dark backdrop of Japan.

His best known novels are Almost Transparent Blue, Audition, Coin Locker Babies and In the Miso Soup.

1936

It won him the 36th Tanizaki Prize.

The same year Exodus From Hopeless Japan (Kibō no Kuni no Exodus) told of junior high school students who lose their desire to be involved in normal Japanese society and instead create a new one over the internet.

1952

Murakami was born Ryūnosuke Murakami (村上龍之助) in Sasebo, Nagasaki on 19 February 1952.

The name Ryūnosuke was taken from the protagonist in Daibosatsu-tōge, a work of fiction by Kaisan Nakazato.

Murakami attended school in Sasebo.

While a student in senior high, he joined in forming a rock band called Coelacanth, as the drummer.

In the summer of his third year in senior high, Murakami and his fellow students barricaded the rooftop of his high school and he was placed under house arrest for three months.

During this time, he had an encounter with hippie culture, which had a strong influence on him.

1970

After graduating from high school in 1970, Murakami formed another rock band and produced some 8-millimeter indie films.

He enrolled in the silkscreen department at Gendaishichosha School of Art in Tokyo, but dropped out in the first year.

He married his wife, a keyboard player, in the 1970s and their son was born in 1980.

1972

In October 1972, he moved to Fussa, Tokyo and was accepted for the sculpture program at Musashino Art University.

1976

Critically acclaimed as a new style of literature, it won the Gunzo Prize for New Writers in 1976, despite some objections on the grounds of decadence.

Later the same year, his Blue won the Akutagawa Prize, going on to become a bestseller.

1980

In 1980, Murakami published a much longer novel, Coin Locker Babies, again to critical acclaim, and won the 3rd Noma Liberal Arts New Member Prize.

1987

Next came the autobiographical novel 69, and then Ai to Gensō no Fascism (1987), revolving around the struggle to reform Japan's survival-of-the-fittest society with a secret "Hunting Society".

1988

His work Topaz (1988) concerns a sado-masochistic woman's radical expression of her sexuality.

1990

In the early 1990s, Murakami devoted himself to disseminating Cuban music in Japan and established a label, Murakami's, within Sony Music.

1994

Murakami's The World in Five Minutes From Now (1994) is written as a point of view in a parallel universe version of Japan, and was nominated for the 30th Tanizaki Prize.

1996

In 1996 he continued his autobiography 69, and released the Murakami Ryū Movie and Novel Collection.

He also won the Taiko Hirabayashi Prize.

The same year, he wrote the novel Topaz II, about a female high school student engaged in "compensated dating", which later was adapted as the live-action film Love and Pop by anime director Hideaki Anno.

His Popular Hits of the Showa Era concerns the escalating firepower in a battle between five teenage male and five middle-aged female social rejects.

Literary scholar Barbara Greene suggests that the text reveals how "the invisible violence of post-Bubble Japan’s social order is made explicit through a low-stakes, yet hyperviolent, guerilla war undertaken by a set of ludicrous and narcissistic characters whose increasingly deadly attacks are met with public indifference. Within the consumer-capitalist social order, personal satisfaction is the paramount goal..."

1997

In 1997 came the psychological thriller novel In the Miso Soup, set in Tokyo's Kabuki-cho red-light district, which won him the Yomiuri Prize for Fiction that year.

1999

Murakami started the e-magazine JMM (Japan Mail Media) in 1999 and still serves as its chief editor.

2000

Parasites (Kyōsei chū, 2000) is about a young hikikomori fascinated by war.

2001

In 2001, Murakami became involved in his friend Ryuichi Sakamoto's group NML No More Landmines, which sets out to remove landmines from former battle sites around the world.

2004

In 2004, Murakami announced the publication of 13 Year Old Hello Work, aimed at increasing interest in young people who are entering the workforce.

2005

Hantō wo Deyo (2005) is about an invasion of Japan by North Korea.

It won him the Noma Liberal Arts Prize and Mainichi Shuppan Culture Award.

2006

Since 2006, he has also hosted a talk show on business and finance called Kanburia Kyuden, broadcast on TV Tokyo.

The co-host is Eiko Koike.

In the same year, he began a video streaming service, RVR (Ryu's Video Report).

2010

In 2010, he established a company, G2010, to sell and produce eBooks.

Murakami's first work was the short novel Almost Transparent Blue, written while he was still a university student.

It deals with promiscuity and drug use among disaffected youth.