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Taiwanese author From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kō Bun'yū (Japanese: 黄文雄; 1938 – 2024), also known as Huang Wenxiong (Chinese: 黃文雄; pinyin: Huáng Wénxióng; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: N̂g Bûn-hiông), was a controversial Taiwanese author, resident in Japan, who is well known for his staunch anti-Mainland Chinese stance and for penning a number of highly controversial books about Chinese, Japanese and Korean history and culture.[1]
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Japanese. (January 2021) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
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Kō was a visiting professor at Takushoku University.[when?] His works often assert that Taiwan and Korea owe their present-day successes, and much of their culture, to Japan.
In addition, Kō was an advisor to the Society for the Restoration of Sovereignty (Shukenkaifuku wo mezasukai) and a councilor of the World Strategic Research Institute (a think tank affiliated with the Family Federation for World Peace and Unification (formerly the Unification Church)).
Passed away in July 2024. Died at the age of 85. His death was announced on August 26, 2024, on Facebook by Chen Chung-guang, chairman of the Taiwan Independence Federation. Taiwanese mass media reported Ko bunyu's death, but Japanese mass media did not report it at all.
Kō also provided the script for the manga An Introduction to China: A Study of Our Bothersome Neighbors (マンガ中国入門 やっかいな隣人の研究; Manga Chūgoku nyūmon: Yakkai na rinjin no kenkyū).
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