In history, there was such a person as Nahoko in the middle of the world

Updated on history 2024-05-18
9 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    No, although there is Jiro Horikoshi, Nahoko Satomi is a character written by the author himself.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    No. Nahoko Satomi is the heroine of the animated film "The Wind Rises" by Japanese animation master Hayao Miyazaki. The origin of the name in the anime is derived from Tatsuo Hori** "Nahoko".

    Nahoko Satomi is a very Japanese woman, beautiful, pure, literary, gentle and graceful, and terminally ill (tuberculosis was an incurable disease at the time). She is like the morning dew in the morning, illuminating the monotonous life of workaholic Erlang. A person who can be desperate for love, love at first sight with Jiro, and later secretly ran out of the hospital despite his serious illness.

    When he was dying, he just wanted to see him for the last time. I always smile sweetly, but I actually feel bitter in my heart.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    It's fictional, but Satomi Nahoko has a prototype, and it's a woman named Setsuko (I forgot what her last name is).

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    The Wind Rises is an anime that may or may not really have Nahoko Satoma.

    Satomi Nahoko Encyclopedia.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    On the day before the Kanto Da** happened, the heroine Nahoko Satomi took a train to Tokyo. Jiro Horikoshi, the male protagonist who was reading at the junction of the train car and the carriage, had his hat blown away due to a sudden wind. Nahoko, who was sitting in the carriage next to her, reached out and caught her hat, so the two met here.

    After the Kanto Dai** incident, Jiro Horikoshi helped Nahoko return to her home in Ueno, but separated from Nahoko without leaving his name and began his school career in Tokyo.

    Ten years later, Nahoko meets and falls in love again in Karuizawa with Jiro Horikoshi, who has come here for a vacation due to work setbacks.

    Nahoko and Jiro Horikoshi married at the Kurokawa family, and the Kurokawa couple witnessed the marriage. After a period of reunion, Jiro Horikoshi's nine-test single-seat fighter was successfully tested (the prototype of the Type 96 shipboard fighter), and Nahoko left a letter and died after returning to the highland hospital alone.

    With Japan's fiasco in World War II, Jiro Horikoshi saw in a dream the wreckage of the Zero fighter he designed, and Nahoko, whom he loved so much.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    Nahoko Nahoko is the protagonist of the book, who is angry at the relationship between her mother and the writer Mori Yu Wahiko, and does not want to continue living with her mother, so she hastily decides to marry Keisuke Kurokawa, a junior clerk. However, the "refuge" type marriage envisioned by Nahoko did not go as she wished, and after the marriage, Nahoko was depressed, fell ill and suffered blood, and was admitted to a sanatorium. The sanatorium seemed to have become a "refuge" for her to escape her unhappy married life.

    In the sanatorium, Du Zhuming, a friend from her youth, once came to visit her once, and the two said goodbye indifferently. But Du Zhuming's sincere and persistent love for life invisibly gave her the courage to find a new life. After that, Nahoko tried a lot of efforts to find true "couple love", but she and Keisuke Kurokawa finally failed to produce true love, and Nahoko fell into loneliness and despair again.

    At this point, it is clear that Nahoko has repeated her mother's tragic life and has fallen victim to a lonely fate that cannot be escaped.

    The male protagonist of Du Zhuming was originally a teenager who loved to dream and was full of fantasies about the future, but now he works in an ordinary architectural firm. A brush with Nahoko on the street brought back memories that had been sealed for a long time, and he once again had the idea of quitting his job. However, in the end, because of doubts about the future, dissatisfaction with the status quo and nostalgia for good memories, he left reality and returned to the village again.

    However, his love with Hatsueda and Sanae does not make him feel like he is truly in love. When he fell ill and went to visit Nahoko at the Takayama Sanatorium and was treated coldly, he realized that that his good wish was just a shadow of his past memories.

    Despair of the future is a hint of the fate of Dotsuki's eventual death.

    Mrs. Mimura. In the first part, "The House of Elms", the mother is portrayed as the central character. The mother, Mrs. Mimura, is distressed by the fact that she cannot accept the love of the writer Mori Yu on the one hand, and on the other hand, she cannot understand the rebellious attitude of her daughter Nanahoko towards the love between them. The mother recorded her distress and incomprehension in the form of a diary, as if she hoped that her daughter would one day read the diary and understand herself.

    Later, the mother suffered a heart attack, and she died in a hurry before she could really communicate with her daughter.

    Her mother, Mrs. Mimura, was a rare intellectual woman at the time, and unlike ordinary women who worked every day, the seeds of romance were buried deep in her heart. When the widowed Mrs. Mimura meets the young writer Mori Yusuhiko, Sen's talent and enthusiasm awaken the romantic fire in Mrs. Mimura's heart, and soon the love affair between the two comes naturally. However, this relationship is not accepted, and the new relationship brings not only joy and happiness, but also unspeakable pain when it is not accepted.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    "Nahoko" is a love created by Tatsuo Hori, a Japanese family, and is the author's last published novel. The work was first published in 1934 in the magazine "Bungei Chunu" under the title "The Daughter of Monogatari", and then Horitatsu Yuyu had a new inspiration at the end of the work, and published a new chapter in the magazine "** Koron" after 1941. In the same year, a single book combining the two chapters was also released by the Creative Yuan Society.

    **Through the description of the complex and subtle psychological activities of the protagonist Nahoko during her recuperation in the sanatorium, her husband Keisuke Kurokawa and her childhood friend Tsukiaki, it reflects the anguish and hesitation of an ordinary woman on the road of life.

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    The long ** "Nahoko" is an important work of Tatsuo Hori, published in the March issue of "** Gong Lun" in the 16th year (1941) of Zhao Yu Li Xianhe, and won the first ** Gong Lun Award in 1942. This feature has been in gestation for 7 years, and it is a work that best reflects the creative personality of Di Chenxiong in terms of the material, structure, expression and stylistic style of the work.

    On April 23, 1961, TV Asahi launched a TV series adapted from this **, in which the main actors Bao Cong filmed Kaneko Iwasaki, Eiji Okada and others.

  9. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    **The story is divided into two chapters, the House of Elm and the Nahoko, in which the famous woman named Nanako Mimura is described after marrying Keisuke Kurokawa, an office worker, reading a notebook written by her mother, Mrs. Mimura, which is about Mrs. Mimura recalling the male writer Mori Yugahiko, whom she had a crush on before, but did not end up dating. After her mother's death, Nahoko buried her previous notes under an elm tree and felt that her mother's notes were affected by them.

    In the second paragraph, Nahoko mentions that she lived an unhappy life with Ginkfinch after marriage, and one day Nahoko met her childhood friend Tsukiaki on the road around Ginza, but found that her relationship with Tsukiaki had become estranged. Later, Namasa's Hoko coughed up blood due to lung disease, and traveled from Tokyo to Yatsugatake's tuberculosis treatment home to recuperate. In the process of recuperation, Nahoko began to think about it, and slowly had some new ideas:

    Even if life is lonely, you should not passively avoid it.

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