Mitsu Yashima
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Mitsu Yashima | |
---|---|
八島 光 | |
Born | Tomoe Sasako October 11, 1908[1] Innoshima, Hiroshima, Japan[1] |
Died | December 7, 1988 | (aged 80)
Occupation(s) | Children's book author, artist |
Spouse | Taro Yashima |
Children | 2, including Makoto Iwamatsu |
Mitsu Yashima (八島 光, Yashima Mitsu, born Tomoe Sasako (笹子 智江, Sasako Tomoe); October 11, 1908 – December 7, 1988) was an artist, children's book author, and civic activist.
Life
[edit]Mitsu was the daughter of a shipbuilding company executive. She attended Kobe College, and later enrolled at Bunka Gakuin in Tokyo.[2] In the 1930s, she joined a Marxist study group, where she met her future husband, artist Taro Yashima. She and her husband painted farmers and laborers, and participated in exhibitions of art that critiqued Japan's military expansion and the government's increasingly heavy handed suppression of dissent.[2] She and her husband were later imprisoned and brutalized by the Tokkō (special higher police) in response to their antiwar, anti-Imperialist, and anti-militarist stance in the 1930s.[3] Their lives from this time are depicted in her husband's picture books, published in English, The New Sun and Horizon is Calling.[4]
Mitsu and Taro's son Makoto Iwamatsu was born in 1933. He would eventually become a renowned actor and voice actor. In 1939 she and Taro went to America so that Taro could avoid conscription into the Japanese Army and to study art.[3] After the attack on Pearl Harbor, Mitsu joined the U.S. war effort, working for the Office of Strategic Services by sending American propaganda to the Japanese. She adopted the pseudonym Mitsu Yashima during the war.
Following the war in 1948, Mitsu and Taro had a daughter Momo, who also appeared in their children's books. The family moved from New York to Los Angeles in 1954, where she and Taro opened an art institute.[5] With Taro, she co-wrote the children's books Plenty to Watch in 1954 and Momo's Kitten in 1961.[1]
Mitsu left Taro in the 1960s and moved to San Francisco, where she devoted herself to art and community work as well as civic activism.[2] In 1976, she appeared in the television movie adaptation of the book Farewell to Manzanar, acting opposite her son and daughter.[2]
In declining health, she moved back to Los Angeles in 1983 and lived with her daughter until her death on December 7, 1988.[6][2]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c Wakida, Patricia. "Mitsu Yashima". Densho Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2018-11-02.
- ^ a b c d e Robinson, Greg; Matsumoto, Valerie (September 11, 2018). "The Epic Lives of Taro and Mitsu Yashima". Discover Nikkei. Retrieved 2019-07-29.
- ^ a b Shibusawa, Naoko (October 2005). ""The Artist Belongs to the People": The Odyssey of Taro Yashima". Journal of Asian American Studies. 8 (3): 257–275. doi:10.1353/jaas.2005.0053. S2CID 145164597. Retrieved 27 July 2019.
- ^ Pulvers, Roger (September 11, 2011). "Taro Yashima: an unsung beacon for all against 'evil on this Earth'". The Japan Times. Retrieved 2011-09-18.
- ^ "Taro Yashima Papers". de Grummond Children's Literature Collection. University of Southern Mississippi. July 2001. Retrieved 2013-06-27. With biographical sketch.
- ^ Judy Stone (2007-03-18). "An unlikely heroine of World War II". SFGate. Retrieved 2014-02-04.
Further reading
[edit]- Mitsu Yashima, Tarō Yashima (Sep 5, 1961). Momo's Kitten. Viking.
External links
[edit]- "Taro Yashima: Artist for Peace | History". History.librarypoint.org. Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2014-02-04.
- 1908 births
- 1988 deaths
- Japanese anti-fascists
- People from Hiroshima Prefecture
- Japanese emigrants to the United States
- American artists of Japanese descent
- American women civilians in World War II
- American civil rights activists of Japanese descent
- People of the Office of Strategic Services
- 20th-century Japanese women artists
- 20th-century American women artists
- American children's writers