The Family (Shimazaki novel) explained

The Family
Orig Lang Code:ja
Title Orig:家 (Ie)
Translator:Cecilia Segawa Seigle
Author:Tōson Shimazaki
Country:Japan
Language:Japanese
Genre:Naturalist novel
Autobiographical novel
Publisher:Yomiuri Shimbun (1910)
Chūō Kōron (1911)
Release Date:1910–11
English Release Date:1976
Media Type:Print

is a Japanese novel written by Tōson Shimazaki, first serialized in 1910–11. This autobiographical novel deals with the disintegration of two provincial families, the Koizumis and the Hashimotos.

Plot

The Family covers a period of twelve years in the lives of the Koizumi and the Hashimoto families, from 1898 to 1910.[1] (These two families are based on the real-life families of Shimazaki and Takase: one was Tōson's own family and the other the family into which his eldest sister married.) Originally well respected, the families find themselves slipping down the social ladder as their eldest sons, Koizumi Minoru and Hashimoyo Tatsuo, take on disastrous financial projects. The character Sankichi is the youngest son of the Koizumi family, a writer, and an alter ego for the author himself.

Translation

The Family was published in an English translation provided by Cecilia Segawa Seigle in 1976.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Shimazaki, Tōson . Cecilia . Segawa Seigle . 1976 . The Family . Tokyo . University of Tokyo Press . xiii.