Miyake Kaho Explained

Kaho Miyake
Native Name:三宅花圃
Birth Name:Tatsuko Tanabe
Birth Place:Edo, Japan
Birth Date:4 February 1868
Occupation:Novelist, essayist, poet
Nationality:Japanese
Language:Japanese
Notableworks:Yabu no uguisu (藪の鶯)
Education:Tokyo Women's Normal School
(now Ochanomizu University)
Period:Meiji

Tatsuko Miyake (三宅 竜子, Miyake Tatsuko, née Tanabe, 4 February 1868 − 18 July 1943), known by her pen name, was a Japanese novelist, essayist, and poet. She has long been associated with joryū bungaku ("women's literature"), acknowledged as the first woman to have written in the modern period.[1] Her most notable work is Yabu no uguisu (藪の鶯, lit. "Warbler in the Grove"), published in 1888.[2] [3]

Biography

Miyake was born Tatsuko Tanabe in Edo (renamed Tokyo the same year) as the oldest daughter of government official Taichi Tanabe. An attendant of Tokyo Women's Normal School (now Ochanomizu University), she also studied with female poet Utako Nakajima (1841−1903) at Nakajima's private school titled Haginoya. The success of Miyake's Yabu no uguisu, published before her graduate, motivated Haginoya fellow student Ichiyō Higuchi to become a professional writer herself.

In 1892, Miyake married philosopher and journalist Setsurei Miyake. She continued to write short stories and essays. In 1920, Miyake and her husband published Josei nihonjin ("Japanese Women"), a magazine on women's issues.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Copeland, Rebecca L., 1956-. Lost leaves : women writers of Meiji Japan. 2000. University of Hawai'i Press. 0585482225. Honolulu. 53895796.
  2. Web site: 三宅花圃 (Miyake Kaho) . Kotobank . ja . 14 October 2021.
  3. Book: Danly, Robert Lyons . In the Shade of Spring Leaves: The Life and Writings of Higuchi Ichiyō . New Haven . Yale University Press . 1981 . 978-0-30002-614-6.