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Takako Takahashi

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Takako Takahashi (高橋 たか子, Takahashi Takako, born March 2, 1932) is a noted Japanese author.

Biography

Takahashi was born in Kyoto, as the only child of well-to-do parents, with the maiden name of Takako Okamoto. In 1954 she received her undergraduate degree from Kyoto University in French, with a senior thesis on Charles Baudelaire. Six months later she married fellow student Kazumi Takahashi, subsequently a well-known writer. She supported him in the first two years of their marriage by a series of odd jobs, then returned to Kyoto University in 1956 to receive a master's degree in French literature in 1958 for a thesis on François Mauriac.

From 1958-1965, Takahashi and her husband lived in Osaka, where she began a first novel in 1961 (A Ruined Landscape). Her husband won a major literary award in 1962, making his name and providing sufficient funds so that Takahashi could quit her job, work on her novel, and publish a translation of Mauriac's Thérèse Desqueyroux. In 1965 they moved to Kamakura, Kanagawa, when her husband obtained a teaching position at Meiji University; in 1967, when he became a professor at Kyoto University, she remained in Kamakura. When her husband fell ill in 1969, he returned to Kamakura where she took care of him.

After her husband's early death in 1971, Takahashi and began writing short stories and novels, as well as a memoir of her husband, and translations of French literature. In the 1970s she was both prolific and successful as an author, publishing four novels and eight collections of short stories. In 1980 Takahashi moved to France, where in 1985 she became a nun. After returning to Japan, she entered a Carmelite convent but left after one year, returning to Kyoto to take care of her mother. She continued to publish prolifically.

Takahashi received the 1985 Yomiuri Prize for Ikari no ko (Child of Wrath).

English translations

  • Lonely Woman, translated by Maryellen Toman Mori (New York: Columbia University Press, 2004). ISBN 978-0-231-13126-1.
  • "Congruent Figures" (Sōjikei), in Japanese Women Writers: Twentieth Century Short Fiction, translated by Noriko Mizuta Lippit and Kyoko Iriye Selden (Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, 1991)
  • "Doll Love" (Ningyō ai), translated by Mona Nagai and Yukiko Tanaka in This Kind of Woman: Ten Stories by Japanese Women Writers, 1960-1976, ed. Yukiko Tanaka and Elizabeth Hanson (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1982), 197-223.
  • "Holy Terror" (Kodomo-sama) and "A Boundless Void" (Byōbo), translated by Amanda Seaman in The Massachusetts Review 51/3 (Fall 2010): 439-55 and 456-81.

References

  • Japanese Wikipedia article
  • Julia Bullock, "A Single Drop of Crimson: Takahashi Takako and the Narration of Liminality," Ph.D. dissertation, Stanford University, 2004.
  • Maryellen Toman Mori, "The Quest for Jouissance in Takahashi Takako's Texts," in The Woman's Hand: Gender and Theory in Japanese Women's Writing, ed. Paul Schalow and Janet Walker (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1996), 205-35.
  • ________, translator's preface to Lonely woman (see reference above).
  • Amanda C. Seaman, "A Womb of One's Own: Takahashi Takako's Women Apart," The Massachusetts Review 51/3 (Fall 2010): 482-85.
  • Mark Williams, "Double Vision: Divided Narrative Focus in Takahashi Takako's Yosōi Seyo, Waga Tamashii Yo", in Oe and Beyond: Fiction in Contemporary Japan, ed. Stephen Snyder and Philip Gabriel (Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press, 1999), 104-29.

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