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Minae Mizumura

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Minae Mizumura (水村 美苗, Mizumura Minae, born 1951) is a Japanese novelist.

Educated in the US, she wrote her first published work in English, a scholarly essay on the literary criticism of Paul de Man. She is often portrayed[according to whom?] as a novelist who questions the conventional boundaries of national literature. Her novels include Light and Darkness Continued, An I Novel from left to right, and A True Novel, which has been selected for the Japanese Literature Publishing Project, a national program to promote translations of Japanese literature.[1] She also writes essays and literary criticism in major newspapers and journals. Many of Minae Mizumura's works have been described[according to whom?] as highly readable and often entertaining, while, at the same time, resonating with historical significance. They are also known for their formalistic innovations, such as making use of unusual printing formats and inserting English texts and photographic illustrations. Because she returned to Japan as an adult and chose to write in Japanese despite her coming of age in the United States and her education in English, critics[who?] have often noted her particular love for the language and her commitment to Japanese literature. Her analysis and observations on the demise of Japanese, detailed in her book of criticism titled The Fall of the Japanese Language in the Age of English, gained much attention from the mainstream media as well as the Internet.[citation needed] In the same book, she wrote of the significance of preserving the great literary tradition established during the time of building modern Japan.

Mizumura has taught at Princeton University, the University of Michigan and Stanford University. She was a resident novelist in the International Writing Program at the University of Iowa in 2003. She won the 1991 Agency for Cultural Affairs New Artist Award, the 1996 Noma New Artist Award, and the 2003 Yomiuri Prize for Literature. Minae Mizumura now resides in Tokyo, Japan.

Early life

Born into a middle-class family in Tokyo, she moved to Long Island, New York at the age of twelve. Her years of reading and re-reading European literature during her childhood in post war Japan, and modern Japanese literature while attending American high school, later became the foundation for her novels. After studying studio art at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston and French at Sorbonne in Paris, she went on to Yale College, majoring in French. While still a student at Yale Graduate School, she published a critical essay, "Renunciation",[n 1] on the writing of the literary critic Paul de Man upon his death. It was noticed[according to whom?] as a precursor to later studies on de Man's work and launched her writing career.

Career

Her first novel, Light and Darkness Continued, a sequel to Natsume Sōseki's unfinished classic, and her second, An I Novel From Left to Right, a fictionalized autobiography, were first serialized in quarterly journals edited by the literary critic Kojin Karatani. Her third, A True Novel, a re-telling of Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights in postwar Japan, was first serialized in the monthly literary journal Shincho. It was translated into English in 2013.

Awards and honors

Works

Notes

  1. ^ "Renunciation", Yale French Studies, no. 69 (1985), pp. 81–97. doi:10.2307/2929926.

References