was a Japanese author and guitarist whose 1960 short story Fà «ryà « mutan ("Tale of an Elegant Dream") caused a nationwide uproar and led to an attempt by an ultranationalist to assassinate the president of the magazine that published it.
Fukazawa was born in Isawa, Yamanashi, Japan. His first novel, , won the prestigious Chà «à  Kà Âron Prize, announcing his status as a rising star in the literary world, and has twice been adapted for film: first by Keisuke Kinoshita in 1958, and again by Shà Âhei Imamura in 1983. Imamura's film won the Cannes Film Festival Palme d'Or.
In the fall of 1960, the mainstream monthly magazine Chà «à  Kà Âron published his satirical short story Furyà « mutan (風æµÂ夢èÂÂ, âÂÂThe Tale of an Elegant Dream"). In the story, an unnamed protagonist narrates a dream sequence in which leftists take over the Imperial Palace and behead the Emperor and Empress, as well as the Crown Prince and Crown Princess, before an enthusiastic crowd. This story provoked fury in the Imperial Household Agency and among Japanese right-wing ultranationalists.
On February 1, 1961, in response to the story, Kazutaka Komori, a seventeen-year-old rightist, broke into the home of Hà Âji Shimanaka, Chà «à  Kà Âron magazine's president, killed his maid and severely wounded his wife. Fukazawa received death threats on a daily basis, and after offering a tearful public apology, went into hiding for five years. His promising literary career went into a long hiatus, and although he later returned to writing, he never fully recovered his "rising star" status. In later years, he could be found serving grilled bean cakes (imagawayaki) in a working class Tokyo neighborhood at a stall called "Dream Shop" (Yumeya).
The aftermath of the meant that criticism of the Imperial Family, and discussion of the role or existence of the Emperor, became taboo.