Kyoko Iriye Selden Explained

was a Japanese scholar of Japanese language and literature and a translator.[1]

Biography

Kyoko Iriye was born in Tokyo. Her father was a journalist reporting from Paris and Shanghai, and her mother was an English teacher. She attended Seikei High School, and wrote a thesis on Wordsworth at the University of Tokyo, before studying English Literature on a Fulbright Scholarship at Yale University. She taught at Cornell University for twenty-five years, and was a literary translator. She was married to Mark Selden, with whom she had three children and four grandchildren.[2]

Selected publications

Translations into English of Fiction, History, Biography, Early Childhood Education, and Art

The Kyoko Iriye Selden Memorial Translation Prize[3]

Also known as the Kyoko Selden Translation Prize, this was established in 2014, with contributions from colleagues and friends, to honor Kyoko Iriye Selden's scholarly legacy. The prize is awarded to translations that are at the unpublished stage, to support and encourage translation and publication of Japanese language materials across a broad range.

2021 Winners

2020 Competition cancelled
2019 Winner

2018 Winners

Honorable Mention: Chapter Four of Ishimure Michiko's historical novel about the Shimabara Rebellion, Birds of Spirit (Anima no tori, 1999) - translated by Bruce Allen2017 Winners

2016 Winner

2015 Winner

2014 Winners

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. News: Sato . Hiroaki . Noted scholar Kyoko Iriye Selden dies in U.S. . 3 November 2021 . . 25 January 2013 . en.
  2. Web site: Kyoko Iriye Selden Obituary (2013) New York Times. Legacy.com.
  3. Web site: Selden Memorial Translation Prize 2021 | Department of Asian Studies Cornell Arts & Sciences. asianstudies.cornell.edu.