was a Japanese writer.
Tokuda was born in Kanazawa in Ishikawa Prefecture. Coming from a family of the former feudal nobility, Tokuda began his literary life as a follower of the writer Ozaki Kà Âyà Â, who was four years his senior and had already established himself as a literary man in the late 1880s. Their relationship wasn't to last long, though, with Kà Âyà  dying in 1903, after which Tokuda began to move from Kà Âyà Â's style of romanticism into a mixture of naturalism and the confessional known as "Shizen-shugi", an example of which is his 1908 novel Arajotai (æÂ°ä¸Â帯), which dealt with the frustrations of a young working-class couple.
After the publication of Ashiato (足迹) in 1910, Tokuda would release his most autobiographical work, Kabi (é»´), in 1911, a classic example of the Japanese genre known as the "I-novel". He followed with the novel Rough Living (Arakure, ãÂÂãÂÂãÂÂãÂÂ) in 1915.
After the death of his wife in 1926, Tokuda began a series of relationships with younger women, which would inspire his later works, especially his best-known, Kasà  jinbutsu (仮裠人ç©), released from 1935 to 1938, as well as the unfinished Shukuzu (縮å³) from 1941.
A number of Tokuda's works were adapted into films in Japan. A monument honoring Tokuda was erected near the summit of Mount Utatsu in 1947. The monument features writing authored by poet Murà  Saisei and was designed by architect Yoshirà  Taniguchi.