- Yuasa Yoshiko
Infobox Writer
name = Yoshiko Yuasa
caption = Yuasa Yoshiko
birthdate = birth date|1896|12|7|df=y
birthplace =Kyoto ,Japan
deathdate = death date|1990|10|24|df=y
deathplace =Tokyo ,Japan
occupation = Writer
genre = Russian literature translations
movement =
notableworks =
influences =
influenced = nihongo|Yoshiko Yuasa|湯浅芳子|Yuasa Yoshiko|extra=7 December 1896 -24 October 1990 was aRussian language scholar and translator ofRussian literature inShowa period Japan .Biography
Born in
Kyoto , Yuasa was an early supporter of thefeminist movement in late Taishō and early Showa period Japan. Moving toTokyo , she was also drawn to leftist political movements and became involved with leading femaleproletarian literature movement novelist Nakajo Yuriko. In 1924, after Nakajo divorced her husband, the two women began to live together, and from 1927-1930, traveled together to theSoviet Union , where they studied theRussian language andRussian literature and developed a friendship with notedmovie director Sergei Eisenstein .Evidence suggests that the relationship between Yuasa and Nakajo was a romantic if not sexual one. While Yuasa has also been romantically linked to writer
Tamura Toshiko among others, Nakajo is said to have been the love of her life. Yuasa was never again romantically linked to another woman after Nakajo's marriage to proletarian author andJapan Communist Party leaderMiyamoto Kenji , though in an interview late in life Yuasa said that the word "lesbian" (rezubian/レズビアン) applied to her. [An account of their relationship can be found in 沢部ひとみ 『百合子、ダスヴィダーニヤ—湯浅芳子の青春』、東京:女性文庫・学陽書房、 1990. (Sawabe Hitomi, "Yuriko, dasuvidāniya: Yuasa Yoshiko no seishun" (Yuriko, do svidanya: Yuasa Yoshiko’s youth), Tokyo: Josei bunko / gakuyō shobō, 1990. For the interview, see 沢部ひとみ (pseud. 広沢有美)、「ダンディなロシア文学者湯浅芳子訪問記」、『女を愛する女たちの物語』(別冊宝島64号)東京:JICC出版局、1987、67-73 (Hirosawa Yumi [pseud.; Hirosawa Yumi] "Dandi na Roshia bungakusha Yuasa Yoshiko hōmonki [A Record of a Visit with Dandy Russian Literature Scholar Yuasa Yoshiko] , "Onna wo ai suru onnatachi no monogatari" [Stories of women who love women] [Bessatsu Takarajima, no. 64] Tokyo: JICC Shuppankyoku, 1987, 67–73.) The interview is also available in English as "A Visit with Yuasa Yoshiko, a Dandy Scholar of Russian Literature," trans. James Welker. In Mark McLelland, Katsuhiko Suganuma, and James Welker, eds. "Queer Voices from Japan: First-Person Narratives from Japan's Sexual Minorities", Lanham, Md.: Lexington, 2007, 31-40.]After their return to Japan and Nakajo remarried, Yuasa continued with her translation work of Russian authors, especially the works of
Maxim Gorky ,Anton Chekov andSamuil Marshak . She is especially known for her translation of Chekov'sThe Cherry Orchard . Yuasa died in 1990, and her grave is atTōkei-ji , a temple in Kamakura.Legacy
After her death, the
Yuasa Yoshiko Prize was established for the best translation of a foreign language stage play into Japanese.Notes
References
* 沢部ひとみ (pseud. 広沢有美). 1987.「ダンディなロシア文学者湯浅芳子訪問記」in『女を愛する女たちの物語』(別冊宝島64号), 67-73. 東京:JICC出版局. (Sawabe Hitomi [pseud.; Hirosawa Yumi] . 1987. "Dandi na Roshia bungakusha Yuasa Yoshiko hōmonki [A Record of a Visit with Dandy Russian Literature Scholar Yuasa Yoshiko] . In "Onna wo ai suru onnatachi no monogatari" [Storeis of women who love women] [Bessatsu Takarajima, no. 64] , 67-73. Tokyo: JICC Shuppankyoku.
* 沢部ひとみ. 1990.『百合子、ダスヴィダーニヤ—湯浅芳子の青春』. 東京:女性文庫・学陽書房. (Sawabe Hitomi. 1990. "Yuriko, dasuvidāniya: Yuasa Yoshiko no seishun" (Yuriko, do svidanya: Yuasa Yoshiko’s youth). Tokyo: Josei bunko / gakuyō shobō.
* Sawabe Hitomi. (1987) 2007. "A Visit with Yuasa Yoshiko, a Dandy Scholar of Russian Literature," trans. James Welker. In "Queer Voices from Japan: First-Person Narratives from Japan's Sexual Minorities", ed. Mark McLelland, Katsuhiko Suganuma, and James Welker, 31-40. Lanham, Md.: Lexington, 2007.
* 湯浅芳子, 編. 1978. 『百合子の手紙』. 東京:筑摩書房. (Yuasa Yoshiko, ed. 1978. "Yuriko no tegami" [Yuriko's letters] . Tokyo: Chikuma shobō.)ee also
*
Japanese literature
*List of Japanese authors
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