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Be a Woman by Joan E. Ericson

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Be a Woman

Hayashi Fumiko and Modern Japanese Women's Literature

Joan E. Ericson, Fumiko Hayashi

University of Hawaii Press · Print & ebook · June 1, 2016

Reading lane: Japanese Literary Criticism

Joan Ericson's magnificent survey of writing by Japanese women significantly advances the current debate over the literary category of "women's literature" in modern Japan and demonstrates its significance in the life and work of twentieth-century Japan's most important woman writer, Hayashi Fumiko (1903-1951).

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At a Glance

Who It's For

Reading lane: Japanese Literary Criticism and Japanese Literary Collections.Publisher: University of Hawaii Press.

Book Details

Authors
Joan E. Ericson, Fumiko Hayashi
Publisher
University of Hawaii Press
Published
June 1, 2016
Format
Print & ebook
Theme
Japanese Literary Criticism · Japanese Literary Collections
Reading lane
Japanese Literary Criticism

Affinity

Publisher Categories

  • Literary Lives

  • Short Story Collections (single author)

  • Japanese History

  • Japanese Literary Collections

Show all 8 publisher categories
  • Women Authors Criticism

  • Japanese Literary Criticism

  • Short Story Criticism

  • Women's Studies

About This Book

Joan Ericson's magnificent survey of writing by Japanese women significantly advances the current debate over the literary category of "women's literature" in modern Japan and demonstrates its significance in the life and work of twentieth-century Japan's most important woman writer, Hayashi Fumiko (1903-1951). Until the early 1980s, the literary category of "women's literature" (joryu bungaku) segregated most writing by modern Japanese women from the literary canon. "Women'...

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Joan Ericson's magnificent survey of writing by Japanese women significantly advances the current debate over the literary category of "women's literature" in modern Japan and demonstrates its significance in the life and work of twentieth-century Japan's most important woman writer, Hayashi Fumiko (1903-1951). Until the early 1980s, the literary category of "women's literature" (joryu bungaku) segregated most writing by modern Japanese women from the literary canon. "Women's literature" was viewed as a sentimental and impressionistic literary style that was popular but was critically disparaged. A close scrutiny of Hayashi Fumiko's work--in particular the two pieces masterfully translated here, the immensely popular novel Horoki (Diary of a Vagabond) and Suisen (Narcissus)--shows the inadequacies of categorizing her writing as "women's literature." Its originality and power are rooted in the clarity and immediacy with which Hayashi is able to convey the humanity of those occupying the underside of Japanese society, especially women.

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