Kenji Higuchi
Kenji Higuchi (樋口 健二, Higuchi Kenji, born March 10, 1937) has been a professor of photography at several institutions in Tokyo, and an instructor at the (日本写真芸術専門学校, Nihon Shashin Geijutsu Senmon Gakkō). He is the eldest son of a farmer and at the age of 24 took up photography after viewing Robert Capa's famous war photos. He published some of the first images of nuclear workers toiling inside a reactor in 1977. Higuchi's photos mainly depict people and situations associated with nuclear issues and he won a Nuclear-Free Future Award.[1][2]
Higuchi has documented the struggles of radiation victims and, over a half-century, has written 19 books, including The Truth About Nuclear Plants and Erased Victims. Since the 2011 Fukushima I nuclear accidents his work has gained more attention.[1]
See also[]
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b Michael Alison Chandler (April 10, 2011). "In Japan, new attention for longtime anti-nuclear activist". Washington Post.
- ^ Kenji Higuchi, 2001 Nuclear-Free Future Education Award Recipient Archived 2002-03-18 at the Wayback Machine
External links[]
- (in Japanese) Hōdō shashinshūsei, publisher's description. Includes a chronology of the photographer.
- Living people
- Japanese photojournalists
- Japanese anti–nuclear power activists
- Japanese photographer stubs