Biodata sawako ariyoshi biography

Ariyoshi Sawako

1931-1984, born: Wakayama City, Japan
Novelist, Short Story Writer

Literary Reputation

From the late 1950s until her death in 1984, age 53, Ariyoshi Sawako was among the most popular and prolific of post-1945 Japanese writers. Her talent, even her genius, seemed apparent. Over a span of thirty years, she had received several important literary awards and been nominated for many others. She turned out best sellers as well. Indeed, at the time of her death, Japanese women writers were on the verge of a turnabout and for several years would take most of the major prizes for novels and short stories. Ariyoshi is almost certain to be mentioned in literary biographies as one of Japan’s most prominent postwar women authors. The question is whether critics today, Japanese and foreign, also choose to rank her among the greatest of all modern Japanese writers. In a work of popular biography, 1999, Mark Weston called her one of the thirty seven giants in all of Japanese history, not simply in literature. But in 2002, literary scholar Jay Rubin, in a more selective and

Sawako Ariyoshi

Japanese writer and novelist

Sawako Ariyoshi

Sawako Ariyoshi in
Shufu to seikatsu, April 1960

BornJanuary 20, 1931

Masagocho, Wakayama City

DiedAugust 30, 1984(1984-08-30) (aged 53)

Suginami-ku, Tokyo

Resting placeKodaira Metropolitan Cemetery
Nationality Japan
EducationFoundation degree
Alma materTokyo Woman's Christian University, Sarah Lawrence College
Occupation(s)Novelist, Playwright, Director, Impresario
Notable work
SpouseJin Akira
ChildrenAriyoshi Tamao
Awards

Sawako Ariyoshi (有吉 佐和子 Ariyoshi Sawako, 20 January 1931 – 30 August 1984) was a Japanese writer, known for such works as The Doctor's Wife and The River Ki. She was known for her advocacy of social issues, such as the elderly in Japanese society, and environmental issues. Several of her novels describe the relationships between mothers and their daughters. She also had a fascination with traditional Japanese arts, such as kabuki and bunraku. She also described racial discrimination in the United Stat

Sawako Ariyoshi, the Japanese Simone de Beauvoir

©Kodansha/Aflo

Sawako Ariyoshi, born in 1931, was one of the leading Japanese writers of the 20th century. Her monumental success in post-war Japan was equalled by the controversies she created, as the themes she addressed in her novels turned the established codes of conservative Japanese society upside-down. These themes are, however, very relevant today.

The author was born in the coastal city of Wakayama, then left Japan at the age of six when her parents moved to Indonesia in 1937. Four years later, the family returned to Japan and took up residence in Tokyo. When Sawako finished college, she launched herself into the study of literature and theatre, her father being a big fan of kabuki, the traditional Japanese form of theatre. After completing a course at Tokyo Woman’s Christian University, she headed to New York where she studied theatre, by invitation of the Rockefeller Foundation.

Sawako Ariyoshi wrote some plays, but is better known for her novels. She began with Jiuta in 1956, the first in a long series for t

Copyright ©fatunfo.pages.dev 2025