A Japanese-born critic and translator, Ueda is the author of several volumes of criticism on Japanese literature. In the following excerpt, Ueda discusses Akiko's concept of poetry and her use ...
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In the following essay, Rabson compares Akiko's "Brother, Do Not Die" to her later poems and essays on war in order to reevaluate her reputation as an antiwar poet.
Although Yo...
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In the following excerpt, Strong examines Akiko's poetry as it relates to traditional women's poetry in Japan.
In reading commentaries on Japanese poetry, especially poetry in the tra...
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In the following excerpt, Rodd studies Akiko's life and writings as they relate to the controversy in early twentieth-century Japan over women's place in society.
In November 1911, a ...
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A Japanese-born critic and translator, Ueda is the author of several volumes of criticism on Japanese literature. In the following excerpt, Ueda discusses Akiko's concept of poetry and her use ...
Read more
In the following excerpt, Beichman evaluates Akiko's early work and explores her development as a poet.
Yosano Akiko is one of the many poets that most Japanese know and very few non-Japanes...
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In the following essay, Larson discusses Akiko's conception of women's role in society.
Yosano Akiko was not one to accept passively the limited life script to which many women of her...
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In the following essay Rabson compares Akiko's "Brother, Do Not Give Your Life" to her later poems and essays on war in order to reevalute her reputation as an antiwar poet.
No...
Read more
In the following excerpt, Strong examines Akiko 's poetry as it relates to traditional women's poetry in Japan.
In reading commentaries on Japanese poetry, especially poetry in the tr...
Read more