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Fumiko Enchi

Fumiko Enchi (円地 文子, Enchi Fumiko, 2 October 1905 – 12 November 1986)[1] was the pen-name of Fumiko Ueda, one of the most prominent Japanese women writers in the Shōwa period of Japan.[2] As a writer, Enchi is best known for her explorations into the ideas of sexuality, gender, human identity, and spirituality.[3]

Fumiko Enchi
Native name
円地 文子
BornUeda Fumi (上田 富美)
(1905-10-02)2 October 1905
Tokyo, Japan
Died12 November 1986(1986-11-12) (aged 81)
Tokyo, Japan
Resting placeYanaka Cemetery, Tokyo, Japan
OccupationWriter, playwright
Notable awardsWomen’s Literature Prize (1955, 1966)
Noma Literary Prize (1957)
Tanizaki Prize (1969)
Order of Culture (1985)

Early life

 
Ueda Kazutoshi, the father of Fumiko Enchi

Fumiko Ueda was born in Asakusa, Tokyo, the second daughter of Tokyo Imperial University linguist and professor Ueda Kazutoshi [ja] and his wife Tsuruko.[4] Her father served as president of Kokugakuin University, president of Kogakkan University, was a member of the House of Peers, and was later credited with establishing the foundations of modern Japanese linguistics.[4] Her family also included her paternal grandmother Ine, elder brother Hisashi, elder sister Chiyo, as well as maids, houseboys, a wet nurse, and a rickshaw driver and his wife.[4][5][6]

Of poor health as a child, she was unable to attend classes in school on a regular basis, so her father decided to keep her at home. She was taught English, French and Chinese literature through private tutors. She was also strongly influenced by her paternal grandmother, who introduced her to the Japanese classics such as The Tale of Genji, as well as to Edo period gesaku novels and to the kabuki and bunraku theater.[7] A precocious child, at age 13, her reading list included the works of Oscar Wilde, Edgar Allan Poe, Kyōka Izumi, Kafū Nagai, Ryūnosuke Akutagawa, and especially Jun'ichirō Tanizaki, whose sado-masochistic aestheticism particularly fascinated her. As a child she also gained access to many rare texts when Basil Hall Chamberlain, a mentor in linguistics to her father, donated his entire library of over eleven thousand books to the family before leaving the country in 1910.[8]

From 1918 to 1922, she attended the girl's middle school of Japan Women's University, but was forced to abandon her studies due to health. However, her interest in the theatre was encouraged by her father, and as a young woman, she attended the lectures of Kaoru Osanai, the founder of modern Japanese drama. Her plays took inspiration from Kaoru Osanai, and many of her later plays focused on revolutionary movements and intellectual conflicts.[2]

Literary career

Her literary career began in 1926, with a one-act stage play Birthplace (ふるさと, Furusato) published in the literary journal Kabuki, which was well received by critics, who noted her sympathies with the proletarian literature movement. This was followed by A Restless Night in Late Spring ( 晩春騒夜 Banshun sōya), which was published in the September 1928 issue of the magazine Women's Arts (女人芸術, Nyonin Geijutsu) and performed at the Tsukiji Little Theatre in December 1928. In this play, two female artists, Kayoko and Mitsuko, are caught up in a conflict on their different perspectives towards art and politics. This was Enchi's first play to be produced on stage.[9]

In 1930, she married Yoshimatsu Enchi, a journalist with the Tokyo Nichi Nichi Shimbun, with whom she had a daughter. She then began to write fiction but unlike her smooth debut as a playwright, she found it very hard to get her stories published. Although from 1939, the Tokyo Nichi Nichi Shimbun began publishing a serialization of her translation of The Tale of Genji into modern Japanese, her early novels, such as The Words Like the Wind (Kaze no gotoki kotoba, 1939), The Treasures of Heaven and Sea (Ten no sachi, umi no sachi, 1940) and Spring and Autumn (Shunju, 1943) were not a commercial success. She also continued to struggle with her health, having a mastectomy in 1938 after being diagnosed with uterine cancer, and suffering from post-surgical complications.

In 1945, Enchi's home and all her possessions burned during one of the air raids on Tokyo towards the end of the Pacific War. She had a hysterectomy in 1946, and stopped writing till around 1951.

Postwar success

 
Fumiko Enchi (left) and Motoko Morita (right) in 1960

In 1953, Enchi's novel Days of Hunger (ひもじい月日, Himojii Tsukihi) was received favorably by critics. Her novel is a violent, harrowing tale of family misfortune and physical and emotional deprivation, based partly on wartime personal experiences, and in 1954 won the Women's Literature Prize.

Enchi's next novel was also highly praised: The Waiting Years (女坂, Onna zaka, 1949–1957) won the Noma Literary Prize. The novel is set in the Meiji period and analyzes the plight of women who have no alternative but to accept the demeaning role assigned to them in the patriarchal social order. The protagonist is the wife of a government official, who is humiliated when her husband not only takes concubines, but has them live under the same roof as both maids and as secondary wives.

From the 1950s and 1960s, Enchi became quite successful, and wrote numerous novels and short stories exploring female psychology and sexuality. In Masks (Onna men, 1958), her protagonist is based on Lady Rokujō from The Tale of Genji, depicted as a shamanistic character. After losing her son in a climbing accident on Mount Fuji, she manipulates her widowed daughter-in-law to have a son by any means to replace the one she lost. One of the quotes from the book says, "A woman's love is quick to turn into a passion for revenge--an obsession that becomes an endless river of blood, flowing on from generation to generation".[10]

The theme of shamanism and spiritual possession appears repeatedly in Enchi's works in the 1960s. Enchi contrasted the traditions of female subjugation in Buddhism with the role of the female shaman in the indigenous Japanese Shinto religion, and used this as a means to depict the female shaman as a vehicle for either retribution against men, or empowerment for women. In A Tale of False Fortunes (Nama miko monogatari, 1965, also translated as A Tale of False Oracles, literal translation "The Tale of An Enchantress"), a retelling of the Eiga Monogatari (A Tale of Flowering Fortunes), she sets the story in the Heian period, with the protagonist as Empress Teishi (historical figure Fujiwara no Teishi, also known as Sadako), a consort of Emperor Ichijo. The novel won the 1966 Women's Literature Prize. Alongside The Waiting Years and Masks, A Tale of False Fortunes is considered to be her third work to be directly influenced by The Tale of Genji.[8]

Three of her stories were selected for the Tanizaki Prize in 1969: Shu wo ubau mono (朱を奪うもの), Kizu aru tsubasa (傷ある翼) and Niji to shura (虹と修羅).

Another theme in Enchi's writing is eroticism in aging women, which she saw as a biological inequality between men and women. In Saimu (lit. "Coloured Mist", 1976), an aging woman becomes obsessed with a fantasy in which she can revitalize herself through sexual liaisons with young men. Enchi's works combined elements of realism and erotic fantasy, a style that was new at the time.[11]

Later life and death

Enchi was elected to the Japan Art Academy in 1970. She was made a Person of Cultural Merit in 1979, and was awarded the Order of Culture by the Japanese government in 1985 shortly before her death on November 12, 1986, of a heart attack, suffered while she was at a family event in 1986 at her home in the Yanaka neighborhood of Tokyo. Her grave is at the nearby Yanaka Cemetery. Few of Enchi's works have been translated out of Japanese.

Partial list of works

Novels

  • Kaze no gotoki kotoba (lit. "The Words like the Wind", 1939)
  • Ten no sachi, umi no sachi (lit. "The Treasures of Heaven and Sea", 1940)
  • Shunjū (lit. "Spring and Autumn", 1943)
  • The Waiting Years (Onna Zaka, 1949–1957), English translation by John Bester. Kodansha. ISBN 477002889X
  • Masks (Onna Men, 1958), English translation by Juliet Winters Carpenter.
  • A Tale of False Fortunes (Nama miko monogatari, 1965), English translation by Roger Kent Thomas. University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 0824821874
  • Saimu (lit. "Coloured Mist", 1976)

One-act plays

  • Furusato (lit. "Birthplace", 1926)
  • Restless Night in Late Spring (Banshu sōya, 1928)

Translation

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Schierbeck, Sachiko (1994). Japanese Women Novelists in the 20th Century. 104 Biographies, 1900-1993. Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press. p. 112.
  2. ^ a b Rimer, Thomas J (2014). "The Columbia Anthology of Modern Japanese Drama". New York: Columbia University Press: 170. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  3. ^ Osborne, Hannah (2017-01-02). "Writing behind the scenes: stage and gender in Enchi Fumiko's works". Asian Studies Review. 41 (1): 161–162. doi:10.1080/10357823.2016.1253130. ISSN 1035-7823. S2CID 151433446.
  4. ^ a b c Wada, Tomoko (1987). 昭和文学全集 12. Shogakukan. pp. 473, 1069.
  5. ^ Komatsu, Shinroku (1969). 現代文学大系 40. Chikuma Shobo. pp. 496–497.
  6. ^ Miyauchi, Junko (2009). Ake o ubau mono. Enchi, Fumiko. Kōdansha. p. 206. ISBN 978-4-06-290064-5. OCLC 675515396.
  7. ^ Carpenter, Juliet Winters (Jul 1990). "Enchi Fumiko: "A Writer of Tales"". Japan Quarterly; Tokyo. 37: 343 – via Social Science Premium Collection.
  8. ^ a b Gessel, Van (Summer 1988). "The "Medium" of Fiction: Fumiko Enchi as Narrator". World Literature Today. 62 (Contemporary Japanese Literature): 380–385. doi:10.2307/40144284. JSTOR 40144284.
  9. ^ Kano, Ayako (2006). "Enchi Fumiko's Stormy Days: Arashi and the Drama of Childbirth". Monumenta Nipponica. 61 (1): 59–91. doi:10.1353/mni.2006.0006. S2CID 153359603.
  10. ^ Enchi, Fumiko. Masks.
  11. ^ McCain, Yoko (1980). "Eroticism and the Writings of Enchi Fumiko": 32–46. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)

References

  • Cornyetz, Nina. Dangerous Women, Deadly Words: Phallic Fantasy and Modernity in Three Japanese Writers, Stanford University Press, 1999. ISBN 0804732124
  • Kano, Ayako (2006). "Enchi Fumiko's Stormy Days: Arashi and the Drama of Childbirth". Monumenta Nipponica. 61 (1): 59–91. doi:10.1353/mni.2006.0006. S2CID 153359603.
  • McClain, Yoko. "Eroticism and the Writings of Enchi Fumiko." The Journal of the Association of Teachers of Japanese, Volume 15, Number 1, 1980 pp. 32–46. ISSN 0885-9884
  • North, Lucy. "Enchi Fumiko." Modern Japanese Writers, Ed. Jay Rubin, Charles Scribner's Sons, 2001. pp. 89–105.
  • Rimer, J Thomas (2007). The Columbia Anthology of Modern Japanese Literature: From 1945 to the present. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0231138048.
  • Rimer, J Thomas (2014). The Columbia Anthology of Modern Japanese Drama. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 9780231128308.
  • Schierbeck, Sachiko. Japanese Women Novelists in the 20th Century. Museum Tusculanum Press (1994). ISBN 8772892684

External links

  • Fumiko Enchi at J'Lit Books from Japan (in English)
  • Synopsis of The Waiting Years (Onna Zaka) at JLPP (Japanese Literature Publishing Project) (in English)

fumiko, enchi, 円地, 文子, enchi, fumiko, october, 1905, november, 1986, name, fumiko, ueda, most, prominent, japanese, women, writers, shōwa, period, japan, writer, enchi, best, known, explorations, into, ideas, sexuality, gender, human, identity, spirituality, n. Fumiko Enchi 円地 文子 Enchi Fumiko 2 October 1905 12 November 1986 1 was the pen name of Fumiko Ueda one of the most prominent Japanese women writers in the Shōwa period of Japan 2 As a writer Enchi is best known for her explorations into the ideas of sexuality gender human identity and spirituality 3 Fumiko EnchiNative name円地 文子BornUeda Fumi 上田 富美 1905 10 02 2 October 1905Tokyo JapanDied12 November 1986 1986 11 12 aged 81 Tokyo JapanResting placeYanaka Cemetery Tokyo JapanOccupationWriter playwrightNotable awardsWomen s Literature Prize 1955 1966 Noma Literary Prize 1957 Tanizaki Prize 1969 Order of Culture 1985 Contents 1 Early life 2 Literary career 3 Postwar success 4 Later life and death 5 Partial list of works 5 1 Novels 5 2 One act plays 5 3 Translation 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksEarly life Edit Ueda Kazutoshi the father of Fumiko Enchi Fumiko Ueda was born in Asakusa Tokyo the second daughter of Tokyo Imperial University linguist and professor Ueda Kazutoshi ja and his wife Tsuruko 4 Her father served as president of Kokugakuin University president of Kogakkan University was a member of the House of Peers and was later credited with establishing the foundations of modern Japanese linguistics 4 Her family also included her paternal grandmother Ine elder brother Hisashi elder sister Chiyo as well as maids houseboys a wet nurse and a rickshaw driver and his wife 4 5 6 Of poor health as a child she was unable to attend classes in school on a regular basis so her father decided to keep her at home She was taught English French and Chinese literature through private tutors She was also strongly influenced by her paternal grandmother who introduced her to the Japanese classics such as The Tale of Genji as well as to Edo period gesaku novels and to the kabuki and bunraku theater 7 A precocious child at age 13 her reading list included the works of Oscar Wilde Edgar Allan Poe Kyōka Izumi Kafu Nagai Ryunosuke Akutagawa and especially Jun ichirō Tanizaki whose sado masochistic aestheticism particularly fascinated her As a child she also gained access to many rare texts when Basil Hall Chamberlain a mentor in linguistics to her father donated his entire library of over eleven thousand books to the family before leaving the country in 1910 8 From 1918 to 1922 she attended the girl s middle school of Japan Women s University but was forced to abandon her studies due to health However her interest in the theatre was encouraged by her father and as a young woman she attended the lectures of Kaoru Osanai the founder of modern Japanese drama Her plays took inspiration from Kaoru Osanai and many of her later plays focused on revolutionary movements and intellectual conflicts 2 Literary career EditHer literary career began in 1926 with a one act stage play Birthplace ふるさと Furusato published in the literary journal Kabuki which was well received by critics who noted her sympathies with the proletarian literature movement This was followed by A Restless Night in Late Spring 晩春騒夜 Banshun sōya which was published in the September 1928 issue of the magazine Women s Arts 女人芸術 Nyonin Geijutsu and performed at the Tsukiji Little Theatre in December 1928 In this play two female artists Kayoko and Mitsuko are caught up in a conflict on their different perspectives towards art and politics This was Enchi s first play to be produced on stage 9 In 1930 she married Yoshimatsu Enchi a journalist with the Tokyo Nichi Nichi Shimbun with whom she had a daughter She then began to write fiction but unlike her smooth debut as a playwright she found it very hard to get her stories published Although from 1939 the Tokyo Nichi Nichi Shimbun began publishing a serialization of her translation of The Tale of Genji into modern Japanese her early novels such as The Words Like the Wind Kaze no gotoki kotoba 1939 The Treasures of Heaven and Sea Ten no sachi umi no sachi 1940 and Spring and Autumn Shunju 1943 were not a commercial success She also continued to struggle with her health having a mastectomy in 1938 after being diagnosed with uterine cancer and suffering from post surgical complications In 1945 Enchi s home and all her possessions burned during one of the air raids on Tokyo towards the end of the Pacific War She had a hysterectomy in 1946 and stopped writing till around 1951 Postwar success Edit Fumiko Enchi left and Motoko Morita right in 1960 In 1953 Enchi s novel Days of Hunger ひもじい月日 Himojii Tsukihi was received favorably by critics Her novel is a violent harrowing tale of family misfortune and physical and emotional deprivation based partly on wartime personal experiences and in 1954 won the Women s Literature Prize Enchi s next novel was also highly praised The Waiting Years 女坂 Onna zaka 1949 1957 won the Noma Literary Prize The novel is set in the Meiji period and analyzes the plight of women who have no alternative but to accept the demeaning role assigned to them in the patriarchal social order The protagonist is the wife of a government official who is humiliated when her husband not only takes concubines but has them live under the same roof as both maids and as secondary wives From the 1950s and 1960s Enchi became quite successful and wrote numerous novels and short stories exploring female psychology and sexuality In Masks Onna men 1958 her protagonist is based on Lady Rokujō from The Tale of Genji depicted as a shamanistic character After losing her son in a climbing accident on Mount Fuji she manipulates her widowed daughter in law to have a son by any means to replace the one she lost One of the quotes from the book says A woman s love is quick to turn into a passion for revenge an obsession that becomes an endless river of blood flowing on from generation to generation 10 The theme of shamanism and spiritual possession appears repeatedly in Enchi s works in the 1960s Enchi contrasted the traditions of female subjugation in Buddhism with the role of the female shaman in the indigenous Japanese Shinto religion and used this as a means to depict the female shaman as a vehicle for either retribution against men or empowerment for women In A Tale of False Fortunes Nama miko monogatari 1965 also translated as A Tale of False Oracles literal translation The Tale of An Enchantress a retelling of the Eiga Monogatari A Tale of Flowering Fortunes she sets the story in the Heian period with the protagonist as Empress Teishi historical figure Fujiwara no Teishi also known as Sadako a consort of Emperor Ichijo The novel won the 1966 Women s Literature Prize Alongside The Waiting Years and Masks A Tale of False Fortunes is considered to be her third work to be directly influenced by The Tale of Genji 8 Three of her stories were selected for the Tanizaki Prize in 1969 Shu wo ubau mono 朱を奪うもの Kizu aru tsubasa 傷ある翼 and Niji to shura 虹と修羅 Another theme in Enchi s writing is eroticism in aging women which she saw as a biological inequality between men and women In Saimu lit Coloured Mist 1976 an aging woman becomes obsessed with a fantasy in which she can revitalize herself through sexual liaisons with young men Enchi s works combined elements of realism and erotic fantasy a style that was new at the time 11 Later life and death EditEnchi was elected to the Japan Art Academy in 1970 She was made a Person of Cultural Merit in 1979 and was awarded the Order of Culture by the Japanese government in 1985 shortly before her death on November 12 1986 of a heart attack suffered while she was at a family event in 1986 at her home in the Yanaka neighborhood of Tokyo Her grave is at the nearby Yanaka Cemetery Few of Enchi s works have been translated out of Japanese Partial list of works EditNovels Edit Kaze no gotoki kotoba lit The Words like the Wind 1939 Ten no sachi umi no sachi lit The Treasures of Heaven and Sea 1940 Shunju lit Spring and Autumn 1943 The Waiting Years Onna Zaka 1949 1957 English translation by John Bester Kodansha ISBN 477002889X Masks Onna Men 1958 English translation by Juliet Winters Carpenter A Tale of False Fortunes Nama miko monogatari 1965 English translation by Roger Kent Thomas University of Hawaii Press ISBN 0824821874 Saimu lit Coloured Mist 1976 One act plays Edit Furusato lit Birthplace 1926 Restless Night in Late Spring Banshu sōya 1928 Translation Edit Enchi Genji a translation of The Tale of Genji into modern Japanese See also Edit Novels portal Japan portalJapanese literature List of Japanese authorsNotes Edit Schierbeck Sachiko 1994 Japanese Women Novelists in the 20th Century 104 Biographies 1900 1993 Copenhagen Museum Tusculanum Press p 112 a b Rimer Thomas J 2014 The Columbia Anthology of Modern Japanese Drama New York Columbia University Press 170 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Osborne Hannah 2017 01 02 Writing behind the scenes stage and gender in Enchi Fumiko s works Asian Studies Review 41 1 161 162 doi 10 1080 10357823 2016 1253130 ISSN 1035 7823 S2CID 151433446 a b c Wada Tomoko 1987 昭和文学全集 12 Shogakukan pp 473 1069 Komatsu Shinroku 1969 現代文学大系 40 Chikuma Shobo pp 496 497 Miyauchi Junko 2009 Ake o ubau mono Enchi Fumiko Kōdansha p 206 ISBN 978 4 06 290064 5 OCLC 675515396 Carpenter Juliet Winters Jul 1990 Enchi Fumiko A Writer of Tales Japan Quarterly Tokyo 37 343 via Social Science Premium Collection a b Gessel Van Summer 1988 The Medium of Fiction Fumiko Enchi as Narrator World Literature Today 62 Contemporary Japanese Literature 380 385 doi 10 2307 40144284 JSTOR 40144284 Kano Ayako 2006 Enchi Fumiko s Stormy Days Arashi and the Drama of Childbirth Monumenta Nipponica 61 1 59 91 doi 10 1353 mni 2006 0006 S2CID 153359603 Enchi Fumiko Masks McCain Yoko 1980 Eroticism and the Writings of Enchi Fumiko 32 46 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help References EditCornyetz Nina Dangerous Women Deadly Words Phallic Fantasy and Modernity in Three Japanese Writers Stanford University Press 1999 ISBN 0804732124 Kano Ayako 2006 Enchi Fumiko s Stormy Days Arashi and the Drama of Childbirth Monumenta Nipponica 61 1 59 91 doi 10 1353 mni 2006 0006 S2CID 153359603 McClain Yoko Eroticism and the Writings of Enchi Fumiko The Journal of the Association of Teachers of Japanese Volume 15 Number 1 1980 pp 32 46 ISSN 0885 9884 North Lucy Enchi Fumiko Modern Japanese Writers Ed Jay Rubin Charles Scribner s Sons 2001 pp 89 105 Rimer J Thomas 2007 The Columbia Anthology of Modern Japanese Literature From 1945 to the present Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0231138048 Rimer J Thomas 2014 The Columbia Anthology of Modern Japanese Drama New York Columbia University Press ISBN 9780231128308 Schierbeck Sachiko Japanese Women Novelists in the 20th Century Museum Tusculanum Press 1994 ISBN 8772892684External links EditFumiko Enchi at J Lit Books from Japan in English Synopsis of The Waiting Years Onna Zaka at JLPP Japanese Literature Publishing Project in English Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fumiko Enchi amp oldid 1097254247, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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