Yosano Akiko (1878-1942) was one of Japan's greatest poets and
translators from classical Japanese. Her output was extraordinary,
including twenty volumes of poetry and the most popular translation
of the ancient classic "The Tale of Genji" into modern Japanese.
The mother of eleven children, she was a prominent feminist and
frequent contributor to Japan's first feminist journal of creative
writing, "Seito" (Blue stocking).
In 1928 at a highpoint of Sino-Japanese tensions, Yosano was
invited by the South Manchurian Railway Company to travel around
areas with a prominent Japanese presence in China's northeast. This
volume, translated for the first time into English, is her account
of that journey. Though a portrait of China and the Chinese, the
chronicle is most revealing as a portrait of modern Japanese
representations of China -- and as a study of Yosano herself.
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