Tomoko Yoshida
Tomoko Yoshida (å‰ç”° 知å, real name Tomoko Kira å‰è‰¯ 知å; Hamamatsu, February 6, 1934) is a Japanese writer.
She studied economics at the Nagoya Women's University and grew up in ShinkyŠ(currently Changchun), the capital of Manchukuo.[1] After WWII, she moved to Toyohara (nowadays Ioujno-Sakhalinsk) and came back to Japan in 1947, where she worked as a high school teacher in Hamamatsu and for the magazines Ise Shimbun, Gomu (ゴム) and Fabeln, Parabeln (寓話).[2]
Awards
- 1970 Akutagawa Prize, MumyÅjÅya (無明長夜)
- 1985 Women's literature Prize, ManshÅ« wa shiranai (満洲ã¯çŸ¥ã‚‰ãªã„)
- 1992 Kawabata Prize, Osonae (ãŠä¾›ãˆ)
- 1998 Izumi KyÅka Prize for Literature, Hako no tsuma (ç®±ã®å¤«)
Works (selection)
- 1970 MumyÅjÅya (無明長夜)
- 1971 Iki mono tachi (生ãã‚‚ã®ãŸã¡)
- 1971 Yoshida Tomoko sakuhin sen (å‰ç”°çŸ¥å作å“é¸)
- 1974 Neko no me, onna no me (猫ã®ç›®ã€å¥³ã®ç›®)
- 1979 Inu no kÅfuku (犬ã®å¹¸ç¦)
- 1980 Chichi no haka (父ã®å¢“)
- 1981 Watashi no ai no monogatari (ã‚ãŸã—ã®æ‹ã®ç‰©èªž)
- 1985 ManshÅ« wa shiranai (満洲ã¯çŸ¥ã‚‰ãªã„)
- 1985 Kamo (é´¨)
- 1993 Osonae (ãŠä¾›ãˆ)
- 1996 Sennen Årai (åƒå¹´å¾€æ¥)
- 1998 Hako no tsuma (ç®±ã®å¤«)
- 2003 Nihon nanmin (日本難民)
References
External links
- (Japanese) kotobank.jp
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