Academic literature on the topic 'Japanese Women authors'

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Journal articles on the topic "Japanese Women authors"

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Fujii, Tomoko, Tasuku Matsuyama, Jiro Takeuchi, Masahiko Hara, Tetsuhisa Kitamura, and Keiko Yamauchi-Takihara. "Women among First Authors in Japanese Cardiovascular Journal." International Heart Journal 59, no. 2 (2018): 372–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1536/ihj.17-187.

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Eger, Edmond I., Michael J. Laster, George A. Gregory, Takasumi Katoh, and James M. Sonner. "Women Appear to Have the Same Minimum Alveolar Concentration as Men." Anesthesiology 99, no. 5 (2003): 1059–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00000542-200311000-00009.

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Background A recent report finds that elderly Japanese women given xenon have a significantly smaller (26% less) MAC (minimum alveolar concentration required to eliminate movement in response to surgical incision in 50% of patients) than Japanese men of the same age. The authors assessed whether this finding applied to other/all anesthetics. Methods The authors reviewed data obtained previously for 258 patients (127 women and 131 men) anesthetized with desflurane, diethyl ether, halothane, methoxyflurane, sevoflurane, or xenon. Data were normalized to the MAC for the anesthetic as determined b
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Buja, Elena. "An Image of Korean Women during the Japanese Occupation of the Peninsula, as It Emerges from Literary Masterpieces." Acta Universitatis Sapientiae, Philologica 13, no. 1 (2021): 73–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/ausp-2021-0006.

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Abstract This paper1 aims to offer a picture of the darkest period in the history of the Korean women, namely that of the Japanese colonial rule (1910–1945). The only advantage Korean women enjoyed as a result of their country’s annexation to Japan was access to institutional education, even if this was done in Japanese and from Japanese course books. But this came with a price: many of the Korean teenaged females were turned into comfort women (sex-slaves) for the Japanese soldiers before and during the Pacific War. Not only did these girls lose their youth, but they also lost their national
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Bahtiar, Ahmad, Gunta Wirawan, Hilmiyatun Hilmiyatun, and Kundaru Saddhono. "Women in Novels Regarding Japanese Occupation: A Study of the Sociology of Literature." Poetika 11, no. 1 (2023): 30. http://dx.doi.org/10.22146/poetika.v11i1.68085.

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The Japanese occupation government in the Indonesia carried out propaganda using various media, including literature. The propaganda often depicts the condition of women at that time. This study examines the picture of women in the Japanese occupation that has been reflected in four novels published in two eras: during and after the Japanese occupation. Novels published during the Japanese occupation were Palawidja by Karim Halim and Cinta Tanah Air by Nur Sutan Iskandar. Meanwhile, the novels published after the Japanese occupation were Dan Perang pun Usai by Ismail Marahimin and Kembang Jepu
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Wadhwa, Anupama, Jaleel Durrani, Papiya Sengupta, Anthony G. Doufas, and Daniel I. Sessler. "Women Have the Same Desflurane Minimum Alveolar Concentration as Men." Anesthesiology 99, no. 5 (2003): 1062–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00000542-200311000-00010.

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Background Women generally report greater sensitivity to pain than do men, and healthy young women require 20% more anesthetic than healthy age-matched men to prevent movement in response to noxious electrical stimulation. In contrast, minimum alveolar concentration (MAC) for xenon is 26% less in elderly Japanese women than in elderly Japanese men. Whether anesthetic requirement is similar in men and women thus remains in dispute. The authors therefore tested the hypothesis that the desflurane concentration required to prevent movement in response to skin incision (MAC) differs between men and
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Raymo, James M., and Miho Iwasawa. "Marriage Market Mismatches in Japan: An Alternative View of the Relationship between Women's Education and Marriage." American Sociological Review 70, no. 5 (2005): 801–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/000312240507000504.

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In Japan, unlike in most other industrialized societies, the decline in marriage rates has been most pronounced among highly educated women. Theoretical interpretations of this distinctive pattern of change have typically emphasized increasing economic independence for women and reductions in the gains to marriage. In this paper, the authors develop and evaluate an alternative explanation that emphasizes women's continued dependence on men's economic resources and decline in the relative supply of highly educated men. Using data from four rounds of the Japanese National Fertility Survey, the a
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Nakagawa, Yukiko, and G. M. Schreiber. "Women As Drivers Of Japanese Firms Success: The Effect Of Women Managers And Gender Diversity On Firm Performance." Journal of Diversity Management (JDM) 9, no. 1 (2014): 19–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.19030/jdm.v9i1.8620.

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While various theoretical arguments have been constructed that imply that a firm would see improved financial performance by increasing the proportion of women managers, previous studies on the issue, in Japan and elsewhere, have shown mixed results. Using data from Toyo Keizai and Nikkei NEEDS on 745 Japanese-listed companies, the authors investigate the impact of womens managerial participation and, more generally, overall workplace and managerial gender diversity on corporate performance. They find a robust significant positive relationship between firm performance and both female manager r
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Raymo, James M., and Hiromi Ono. "Coresidence With Parents, Women's Economic Resources, and the Transition to Marriage in Japan." Journal of Family Issues 28, no. 5 (2007): 653–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0192513x06298236.

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Integrating three theoretical explanations for declining rates of marriage in Japan, the authors develop hypotheses in which linkages between benefits of coresidence with parents and marriage timing are moderated by women's own socioeconomic characteristics. To evaluate these hypothesized interactive relationships, data from a panel survey of Japanese women is used to estimate hazard models for the transition from the parental home to first marriage. Results are consistent with the hypothesis that limited domestic responsibilities contribute to later marriage among coresident women with higher
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Carlson, Leonard A., and Caroline Swartz. "The Earnings of Women and Ethnic Minorities, 1959–1979." ILR Review 41, no. 4 (1988): 530–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/001979398804100403.

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Using 1980 Census data, the authors present estimates of annual earnings equations for twelve ethnic and racial groups, by gender, for 1979, and compare their results with an earlier study's estimates for 1959 and 1969. All minority men and women except Asian Indian and Japanese men earned less than white men in the years for which data were available. The earnings gap for most groups of men and women, however, declined over those years, and the portion of that gap that might be assignable to discrimination (the unexplained “residual”) also declined. A notable exception was white women, whose
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Lee, Su Ki. "Korea from the perspective of Western journalists during the opening of the port: Siegfried Genthe, Jack London, William A: son Grebst, Frederick Arthur McKenzie." Institute of History and Culture Hankuk University of Foreign Studies 86 (May 31, 2023): 159–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.18347/hufshis.2023.86.159.

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In this article, I would like to look at Korea from the perspective of Western journalists during the opening of the port. The researcher focused on four interests that Western journalists are interested in due to paper relations: Seoul, Koreans, journalists, men and women. Chapter II briefly introduces the authors and books of German Genthe, American Jack London, Swedish Ason Grebst, and British Mackenzie by order of visit. Chapter III deals with the perception of the Russo-Japanese War, focusing on American Jack London, Swedish Ason Grebst, and British Mackenzie, except for Gente, who visite
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Japanese Women authors"

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Yamamoto, Traise. "Writing "that other, private self" : the construction of Japanese American female subjectivity /." Thesis, Connect to this title online; UW restricted, 1994. http://hdl.handle.net/1773/9436.

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Iwama, Marilyn Joy. "When Nikkei women write, transforming Japanese Canadian identities, 1887-1997." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1998. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk2/ftp02/NQ34557.pdf.

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Uematsu, Nozomi. "Monstrous happiness : a comparative study of maternal and familial happiness in neoliberalism in Japanese and British women's writing in the 1980s." Thesis, University of Sussex, 2016. http://sro.sussex.ac.uk/id/eprint/61407/.

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My thesis is a feminist comparative project on Japanese and English women's writing, historicised within the social discourses of the 1980s, reading the literary texts of Foumiko Kometani, Doris Lessing, Banana Yoshimoto and Jeanette Winterson. Treating these texts as contemporary, this thesis questions the rhetoric of optimism, with ideas such as “liberty” and “happiness” in the beginning decade of neoliberalism, interrogating how this rhetoric empowers and influences women's life choices in the 1980s. Simultaneously, I consider how these women writing in the 1980s respond, criticise, and exp
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Shibata, Miura Yuko. "Creating Japaneseness : formation of cultural identify /." Thesis, Hong Kong : University of Hong Kong, 2000. http://sunzi.lib.hku.hk/hkuto/record.jsp?B22199196.

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Grace, Elizabeth Ellen. "Women, nation, narration : a comparative study of Japanese and Korean proletarian women's writing from the interwar years (1918-1941)." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2015. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.709209.

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Mutafchieva, Rositsa. "Minoritarian discourse in Japan : Kobayashi Aya's account of Burakumin experience." Thesis, McGill University, 2003. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=19715.

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National Identity, Ethnic Identity, Minoritiness...These are all categories which appear to have existed always already, categories which seem to be normative by nature. They are determinative, for they position human beings on different levels of the social ladder and organize strategically human interrelations. Yet, while these same apparently transcendental categories appropriate a position of universality, they also claim to be particular to a specific place, a specific people, a specific race etc. The disjunction inherent in these categories can be realized within this ideological contrad
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Sen, Sudeshna. "Playing selves : tracing a performative textual subject in Sarashina nikki /." view abstract or download file of text, 2002. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/uoregon/fullcit?p3055711.

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Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Oregon, 2002.<br>Typescript. Includes vita and abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 212-220). Also available for download via the World Wide Web; free to University of Oregon users.
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Kato, Megumi Humanities &amp Social Sciences Australian Defence Force Academy UNSW. "Representations of Japan and Japanese people in Australian literature." Awarded by:University of New South Wales - Australian Defence Force Academy. School of Humanities and Social Sciences, 2005. http://handle.unsw.edu.au/1959.4/38718.

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This thesis is a broadly chronological study of representations of Japan and the Japanese in Australian novels, stories and memoirs from the late nineteenth century to the twenty-first century. Adopting Edward Said???s Orientalist notion of the `Other???, it attempts to elaborate patterns in which Australian authors describe and evaluate the Japanese. As well as examining these patterns of representation, this thesis outlines the course of their development and change over the years, how they relate to the context in which they occur, and how they contribute to the formation of wider Austral
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Hayashi, Mari. "Images de femmes dans la littérature japonaise contemporaine, 1935-1975: cas des nouvelles couronnées par le prix Akutagawa." Doctoral thesis, Universite Libre de Bruxelles, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/2013/ULB-DIPOT:oai:dipot.ulb.ac.be:2013/210557.

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The images of Japanese women in the Japanese contemporary literature (1935-1975) — Short-stories crowned with the Akutagawa Prize<p><p>\<br>Doctorat en sciences sociales, Orientation sociologie<br>info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
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Nakamura, Mariko. "Nogami Yaeko : a life of ideas." Master's thesis, 1996. http://hdl.handle.net/1885/144418.

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Books on the topic "Japanese Women authors"

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Irie, Mulhern Chieko, ed. Japanese women writers: A bio-critical sourcebook. Greenwood Press, 1994.

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1942-, Sato Hiroaki, ed. Japanese women poets: An anthology. M.E. Sharpe, 2008.

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Ikuta, Hanayo. Ichiyō to Shigure: Denki Higuchi Ichiyō, Hasegawa Shigure. Ōzorasha, 1992.

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Taguchi, Randi. Kunekune nikki. Chikuma Shobō, 2002.

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Itō, Hiroshi. Izumi Shikibu nikki kenkyū. Kasama Shoin, 1994.

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Agawa, Sawako. Futari no tegami. Chikuma Shobō, 2001.

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Sakura, Momoko. Momoko no 21-seiki nikki. Gentōsha, 2002.

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Kanno, Tsutome. Uno Chiyo no Sapporo jidai: Joryū sakka no tanjō. Kyōdō Bunkasha, 2000.

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Yan, Sogiru. Kairaku to kyūsai. NHK Shuppan, 1998.

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Sōma, Tsuneo. Akimoto Matsuyo: Keu na onnen no gekisakka. Bensei Shuppan, 2004.

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Book chapters on the topic "Japanese Women authors"

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Kasza, Justyna Weronika. "Autofiction and Shishōsetsu: Women Writers and Reinventing the Self." In Palgrave Studies in Life Writing. Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-78440-9_13.

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AbstractThis chapter explores the shared characteristics, both in terms of thematic concerns and narrative structures and strategies, of autofiction and the distinct Japanese form of the I-novel, shishōsetsu. Focusing on the works of three contemporary Japanese writers, Kanai Mieko, Sagisawa Megumu, and Mizumura Minae, it examines the narrative strategies applied by female authors to redefine the self. The chapter focuses on the traits shared by shishōsetsu and autofiction: the ambiguity of first-person narratives such as the semantics of “I” within the text; the interdependence of author, narrator, and protagonist; the practices of fictionalizing the self; and the question of authorship. Exploring shishōsetsu as an autofictional form also expands the scope of existing theoretical discussions on the autofictional, which rarely take Japanese literature into consideration.
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McGregor, Katharine. "Japanese War Memory and Transnational Activism for Indonesian Survivors of Enforced Military Prostitution During World War Two." In Trajectories of Memory. Springer Nature Singapore, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-99-1995-6_7.

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AbstractIn this chapter, I analyse activism relating to survivors of the so-called comfort women system, enforced military prostitution, during World War Two. The term ‘comfort women’ is highly problematic and considered offensive by many survivors, yet it continues to be the most commonly used term to describe survivors. The most well-known example of national-based activism from affected countries is the activism of the Korean Council. The second most active national group is probably ASCENT from the Philippines (Medoza, 2003). In recognition, however, of the transnational nature of activism on this issue, scholars have studied cooperation between Japanese and Korean activists and between Japanese and Chinese activists, and the role of the Korean diaspora in activism in the United States and Australia. In these studies, the authors have variously reflected on the bases of these transnational partnerships and the different positions of activists within them in relation to their national affiliations and new potential alliances that transcend the nation.
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González-López, Irene, and Michael Smith. "Introduction: Onna Monogatari." In Tanaka Kinuyo. Edinburgh University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474409698.003.0001.

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The introduction presents an overview of Tanaka’s life and career vis-a-vis the history of twentieth-century Japan, emphasising how women participated in and were affected by legal, political and socio-economic changes. Through Tanaka’s professional development, it revisits the evolution of the Japanese studio system and stardom, and explains the importance of women as subjects within the films, consumers of the industry, and professionals behind the scenes. This historical overview highlights Japan’s negotiation of modernity and tradition, often played out through symbolic dichotomies of gender and sexuality. By underscoring women’s new routes of mobility, the authors challenge the simplified image of Japanese oppressed women. The second part of the introduction posits director Tanaka as an outstanding, yet understudied, figure in the world history of women filmmaking. Her case inspires compelling questions around labels such as female authorship, star-as-author, and director-as-star and their role in advancing the production and acknowledgement of women filmmaking.
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Nagatomo, Diane Hawley, Kathleen A. Brown, and Melodie L. Cook. "Introduction." In Foreign Female English Teachers in Japanese Higher Education: Narratives From Our Quarter. Candlin & Mynard ePublishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.47908/11/i.

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This introduction, written by the three editors, gives an overview of the rationale and contents of the edited volume. The book is a collection of narratives, or stories. Each chapter highlighting particular issues that shape the personal and professional lives of foreign women teaching in Japanese higher education. The editors explain in this introduction that the authors of the contributing chapters reflect and analyze their experiences so that their “autobiographical stories shed light not just on the lives of specific individuals, but on certain themes that are relevant in a much broader way” (Vandrick, 2013, p. x). Integrated into the multiple stories that comprise our lives are the many identities that we hold for ourselves. These identities are situated in the many roles that we carry over our lives and careers—teacher, researcher, administrator, coordinator, mentor, student, mother, spouse, among others—all couched in our gendered identities.
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Renshaw, Jean R. "Today’s Japanese Women." In Kimono in the Boardroom. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195117653.003.0002.

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Abstract What is the situation of women in Japan today? Two views from women managers illustrate differing perceptions: Be ambitious. To dream is necessary for success. Be very sure of your possibilities. Women are on the way. Interview with Ryoko Akamatsu, minister of education, ambassador to Uruguay, author of Japan’s equal employment opportunity legislation There is increasing consciousness in the society to promote women executives especially after the enactment of the equal employment law for men and women. There are women executives now and positions created in some companies. Unfortunately, compared to women in the States or any other nation, Japanese females have a lot of room to grow up. In other words, they are immature--dependent on others, especially men, and lack self-esteem for success or independent status.
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Seaman, Amanda C. "Write Your Mother." In Writing Pregnancy in Low-Fertility Japan. University of Hawai'i Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.21313/hawaii/9780824859886.003.0001.

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This chapter traces the literary history of Japanese women writing about pregnancy and childbirth, focusing on two key figures in this development. The first is Meiji-era poet Yosano Akiko whose works explored her experiences as an expectant mother and highlighted the unsettling aspects of pregnancy. While Yosano’s works permitted the literary treatment of formerly taboo issues, later writers rejected her lead, instead treating pregnancy as the prelude to motherhood, as a quasi-sacred moment. This persisted until the 1960s and 70s, when writers influenced by second-wave feminism challenged patriarchal society, rejecting the roles of wife and mother. The second was Tsushima Yuko, whose novels and stories explored alternative, mother-centered family models. Since then, writing about pregnancy rests on these two authors: on one side, treatments of pregnancy that emphasize the alien and the disquieting, and on the other, more ironic works, focusing upon the self-assertive and individualistic nature of childbearing.
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Hemmann, Kathryn. "Dangerous Women and Dangerous Stories." In Rethinking Japanese Feminisms. University of Hawai'i Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.21313/hawaii/9780824866693.003.0011.

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In her two bestselling novels Grotesque and Real World, Kirino Natsuo (1951–) contrasts the commodified sexuality of young women with the sexual alienation of older women. Through her fiction, the author responds to several strands of discourse on women and social responsibility that shaped public policy in Japan during the late 1990s, in which women were blamed for issues such as Japan’s low birthrate and economic stagnation. At the center of these debates was women’s sexuality, which politicians and the media alternately worshipped and villainized. Kirino critiques the contradictions inherent in these discourses by demonstrating their effect on her female characters, who find themselves trapped in a cycle of outwardly imposed misogyny and internalized self-hatred that they in turn direct toward other women.
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Shigematsu, Setsu. "Rethinking Japanese Feminism and the Lessons of Ūman Ribu." In Rethinking Japanese Feminisms. University of Hawai'i Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.21313/hawaii/9780824866693.003.0013.

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This essay reflects on the lessons of the 1970s Japanese women’s liberation movement (Ūman ribu) and Japanese feminism in relation to transnational feminism. The author discusses the need for a praxis of critical transnational feminism (CTF) in order to maintain the critique inherent to transnational feminism. Specifically, the chapter revisits Ūman ribu‘s approach to women and violence to contribute to a praxis of CTF. The second half of the chapter discusses Japanese feminism more broadly in relation to race, nationalism and imperialism and interrogates the status of Japanese feminists in relation to non-Japanese feminists within Japan. In the final part of the chapter, the author discusses the limits of Ūman ribu‘s anti-imperialist feminism and suggests that decolonial feminism can offer renewed direction for feminism in Japan and beyond.
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Creef, Elena Tajima. "Beauty behind Barbed Wire." In Shadow Traces. University of Illinois Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252044403.003.0004.

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“Beauty behind Barbed Wire” offers a gendered lesson in wartime looking at the vast photographic archive documenting Japanese American Nisei women in the World War II internment camps. Building on the author’s previously published scholarship on internment representations, this chapter focuses exclusively on the representation of race, class, and gender in the camp photographs and newspaper coverage of young women interned at Manzanar War Relocation Center in California. This chapter reveals the myriad ways that young Japanese American women were consumed with performing patriotism and citizenship in ways that were inextricably linked to the wartime maintenance of heteronormative standards of femininity, beauty, and domesticity in service to the nation.
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CASTELLI-OLVERA, Sarahi Isuki, and Azul Kikey CASTELLI-OLVERA. "The Influence of Manga and Taoism in the Mexican Comic Hermanas (2021)." In CIERMMI Women in Science Social Sciences and Humanities. ECORFAN, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.35429/h.2022.7.74.92.

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This work states that the comic book Hermanas (Sisters) (2021), by Paulina Ramos González, is the result of a productive consumption that retakes Japanese manga elements: ways of creation, philosophy, and imageries, thus resulting in a hybrid that transposes references and imageries from similarities and conflict. We base our argument on a methodological proposal based on the paradigm of indexica l inferences proposed from the microhistory of Carlo Ginzburg and Giovanni Levi; from which we analyze the details present in the comic’s graphics and narrative, to make interpretative inferences about the context of creation, and the socio-cultural and historical processes present in the author’s visual culture. Our primary sources are the Hermanas graphic novel, and a series of interviews made to the author. Secondary sources are the background resources used in this analysis.
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Conference papers on the topic "Japanese Women authors"

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Sinha Roy, Swagata, and Kavitha Subaramaniam. "READING TOURS INTO MALAYSIAN NARRATIVES: LOCALES IN THE GARDEN OF EVENING MISTS AND THE NIGHT TIGER." In GLOBAL TOURISM CONFERENCE 2021. PENERBIT UMT, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.46754/gtc.2021.11.051.

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If one has not read local English novels like The Garden of Evening Mists and The Night Tiger, one would never be able to imagine the wonders of locales depicted in these two books. One of the reasons the authors here want to visit a said destination is because of the way a certain place is pictured in narratives. Tan Twan Eng brings to life the beauty of Japanese gardens in Cameron Highlands, in the backdrop of postWorld War II while Yangsze Choo takes us into several small towns of Kinta Valley in the state of Perak in her beautifully woven tale of the superstitions and beliefs of the local
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