Ineko Sata (佐多 稲子, Sata Ineko, 1 June 1904 – 12 October 1998), also Ineko Kubokawa (窪川稲子, Kubokawa Ineko), born Ine Sata (佐田 イネ, Sata Ine), was a Japanese writer closely connected to the Proletarian Literature Movement. An advocate of women's rights, she has also repeatedly been linked to the feminist movement.[1][2]

Ineko Sata
BornSata Ine
(1904-06-01)1 June 1904
Nagasaki, Japan
Died12 October 1998(1998-10-12) (aged 94)
Tokyo, Japan
OccupationWriter
Literary movementProletarian Literature Movement

Biography edit

Early life and career edit

Born in Nagasaki to young, unmarried parents (her father was 18, her mother 15), the family moved to Tokyo while she was still a child. Her first job was in a caramel factory, but she later went on to work in restaurants where she befriended several writers, including Ryūnosuke Akutagawa.[3] In 1922, her poems were published for the first time in the magazine Shi to jinsei ("Poetry and life").[4]

Working at the Koroku café-bar in Hongo near Tokyo University, she met Shigeharu Nakano, who would remain a lifelong friend. Along with left-wing writers Tatsuo Hori and Tsurujirō Kubokawa, Nakano ran the progressive literary magazine Roba ("Donkey"). Nakano urged Sata to write her first short story, Kyarameru kōjō kara ("From the Caramel Factory"), which was based on her own experiences and published in 1928.[3][5] Taking her second husband Tsurujirō Kubokawa's[a] family name and slightly modifying her first name, she published her work as Ineko Kubokawa until around 1940.[9][8]

While praised by writers like Yasunari Kawabata for drawing on modernist literary techniques, Sata became increasing involved in issues related to workers and the labor movement. In 1929, she spoke out against the treatment of women workers in cigarette factories. In 1931, she defended the striking workers of the Tokyo Muslin Factory. As a member of the Proletarian Literature Movement, she wrote a series of stories about the lives of ordinary working men and women. These included Kyosei kikoku ("Compulsory Extradition"), about the rights of migrant Korean workers, and Tears of a Factory Girl in the Union Leadership (Kanbu joko no namida),[3] both published in 1931.[10]

In 1932, she joined the outlawed Japan Communist Party (JCP).[3] She became close to JCP leaders Kenji Miyamoto and Takiji Kobayashi, the former imprisoned until 1945,[11] the latter tortured to death by police in 1933. Sata's strong opinions were also often at odds with the official Communist Party platform.[3] In 1935, she was arrested for anti-war activism and spent two months in jail. This experience is described in part in her 1936–38 novel Crimson (Kurenai),[3] a fictionalised account of her marriage and the struggles of being a mother, wife and professional writer.[1]

By 1940, Sata, like Fumiko Hayashi, eventually collaborated with the authorities, publishing both diaries of her travels in Korea and Manchuria and "home front" stories in support of the Japanese war effort, for which she later faced criticism by former associates.[12][1]

Later career edit

In 1945, with the end of the Pacific War, she divorced her husband Kubokawa.[3] In 1946, she rejoined the JCP, although, as before, she often voiced vehement criticism of the party. Also in 1946, she was one of the founding members of the Women's Democratic Club, along socialist politician Shizue Katō and intellectuals like Setsuko Hani and Yuriko Miyamoto.[13] Her wartime experiences were the subject of Watashi no Tōkyō chizu ("My Tokyo Map"), which was written between 1946 and 1948. 1953 saw the first post-war reprint of Crimson, which was received favourably by critics.[1] In 1954, she wrote Kikai no naka no seishun ("Youth among the Machines"). The first collection of her works was issued in 15 volumes in 1958–59. She would write Onna no yado ("Women's Lodgings") in 1963 and Omoki nagare ni ("On a Heavy Tide") in 1968–69.[3]

By 1964, Sata had rejoined the JCP after yet another expulsion. Her activities in the Women's Democratic Club, judged divisive from the perspective of the party mainstream,[14] again led to her expulsion from the JCP.[3] In Keiryu (1964), Sata portrayed the party's internal conflicts.[15]

Sata was awarded the Noma Literary Prize in 1972 for her book Juei ("The Shade of Trees"), which deals with the relationships between Chinese and Japanese people in Nagasaki after the dropping of the atomic bomb, and the (fictionalised) biography of painter Kiyoshi Ikeno (1930–1960), which had already served as basis for her 1961 short story The Colorless Paintings.[16] In 1973, she was offered the Geijutsuin Onshi-shō (Imperial Art Academy Prize) for her life's work, but she refused the award as she regarded it as a nationalist congratulation prize. She accepted the 1976 Kawabata Yasunari Literature Award for one of the stories in her short story collection Toki ni tatsu.[17]

In 1983, Sata received the Asahi Prize for the entire body of her work. She gave an acceptance speech which expressed regret for her contributions to the war effort. Her book about Nakano (who had died in 1979), Natsu no Shiori – Nakano Shigeharu o okuru ("Memories of Summer – a Farewell to Shigeharu Nakano"), was awarded the Mainichi Art Award in 1983.[3]

Ineko Sata died in Tokyo in 1998.[3]

Selected works edit

The year refers to the first publication.

  • 1928: Kyarameru kōjō kara
  • 1929: Café Kyoto (Resutoran Rakuyō)
  • 1931: Tears of a Factory Girl in the Union Leadership (Kanbu joko no namida)
  • 1931: Kyosei kikoku
  • 1936–38: Crimson (Kurenai)
  • 1940: Suashi no musume
  • 1942: Kō ni niou (short story collection)
  • 1949: Watashi no Tōkyō chizu
  • 1950: White and Purple (Shiro to murasaki)
  • 1955: Kikai no naka no seishun
  • 1955: Memory of a Night (Yoru no kioku)
  • 1958–59: Sata Ineko shū (collected works)
  • 1959: Hai iro no gogo
  • 1961: The Colorless Paintings (Iro no nai e)
  • 1963: Onna no yado (short story collection)
  • 1964: Keiryu
  • 1966: Sozō
  • 1970: Omoki nagare ni
  • 1972: Juei
  • 1972: The Inn of Dancing Snow (Yuki no mau yado)
  • 1975: Toki ni tatsu (short story collection)
  • 1977–1979: Sata Ineko zenshū (complete works)
  • 1983: Natsu no Shiori – Nakano Shigeharu o okuru
  • 1986: Camellia Blossoms on the Little Mountain (Chiisana yama to tsubaki no hana)

Awards edit

  • 1963: Women's Literature Award for Onna no yado
  • 1972: Noma Literary Prize for Juei
  • 1976: Kawabata Yasunari Literature Award for Toki ni tatsu (11)
  • 1983: Asahi Prize for her complete work
  • 1983: Mainichi Art Award for Natsu no Shiori – Nakano Shigeharu o okuru

Translations edit

Most of Sata's work was translated into Russian in the 1960s and 1970s,[3] and selected stories have been translated into French and German.[7] English translations include:

  • Sata, Ineko (1980). Atsumi, Ikuko; Simpson, Diane L. (eds.). "Re-encounter (Toki ni tatsu)". Feminist International No. 2: Asian Women '80.
  • Sata, Ineko (1966). "Clay Doll (Doro ningyo)". In Jose, F. Sionil (ed.). Asian P.E.N. Anthology. Translated by Bester, John. New York: Taplinger.
  • Sata, Ineko (1979). "The Caramel Factory". "The Caramel Factory" by Sata Ineko : Biography of Author, Translation and Discussion : An Extended Essay (PDF) (Thesis). Translated by Flowers, Yvette. Christchurch: University of Canterbury. Retrieved 19 January 2022.
  • Sata, Ineko (1985). "The Colorless Paintings (Iro no nai e)". In Ōe, Kenzaburō (ed.). The Crazy Iris and Other Stories of the Atomic Aftermath. New York: Grove Press.
  • Sata, Ineko (1987). "Camellia Blossoms on the Little Mountain (Chiisana yama to tsubaki no hana)". Japanese Literature Today. Translated by Jewel, Mark. P.E.N. Club.
  • Sata, Ineko (1987). "Crimson (Kurenai, excerpt)". In Tanaka, Yukiko (ed.). To Live and to Write: Selections by Japanese Women Writers, 1913-1938. Seattle: The Seal Press.
  • Sata, Ineko; Vernon, Victoria V. (1988). "The Inn of Dancing Snow (Yuki no mau yado)". Daughters of the Moon: Wish, Will, and Social Constraint in Fiction by Modern Japanese Women. University of California Institute of East Asian Studies.
  • Sata, Ineko (1991). "Memory of a Night (Yoru no kioku)". In Lippit, Noriko Mizuta; Selden, Kyoko Iriye (eds.). Japanese Women Writers: Twentieth Century Short Fiction. Routledge.
  • Sata, Ineko (1997). "Water (Mizu, from the short story collection Onna no yado)". In Sabin, Burritt (ed.). Stories from the East. The East Publications.
  • Sata, Ineko (April–June 1999). "Water (Mizu)". Japan Quarterly. Translated by Kirkup, James; Nakano, Michio. Asahi Shimbun.
  • Sata, Ineko (2002). "Elegy (excerpt from My Tokyo Map / Watashi no Tōkyō chizu)". Tokyo Stories: A Literary Stroll. Translated by Rogers, Lawrence. University of California Press.
  • Sata, Ineko (2016). "Café Kyoto (Resutoran Rakuyō), Crimson (Kurenai), The Scent of Incense (Kō ni niou, from the short story collection of the same name), Tears of a Factory Girl in the Union Leadership (Kanbu joko no namida), White and Purple (Shiro to murasaki)". Five Faces of Japanese Feminism: Crimson and Other Works. Translated by Perry, Samuel. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press.

Adaptations edit

Some of Sata's stories were adapted into films, including:

  • 1956: Kodomo no me, director Yoshirō Kawazu
  • 1957: Suashi no musume, director Yutaka Abe
  • 1965: Ane to imōto, director Yoshirō Kawazu

Notes edit

  1. ^ After a brief first marriage, Sata married Kubokawa in 1926[6] or 1929,[7] depending on the source. Already in 1928, her short story Kanojora nokaiwa was published in Senki magazine under the name Kubokawa Ineko.[8]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Sata, Ineko (2016). Five Faces of Japanese Feminism: Crimson and Other Works. Translated by Perry, Samuel. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press.
  2. ^ Smith, Bonnie G., ed. (2008). The Oxford Encyclopedia of Women in World History. Vol. 1. Oxford University Press. p. 638.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Kirkup, James (29 October 1998). "Obituary: Ineko Sata". The Independent. Retrieved 1 October 2021.
  4. ^ Lippit, Noriko Mizuta; Iriye Selden, Kyoko, eds. (1983). Revival: Stories by Contemporary Japanese Women Writers. Routledge. pp. 214–215.
  5. ^ Loftus, Ronald P. (2004). "Re-presenting the Self: Sata Ineko". Telling Lives: Women's Self-Writing in Modern Japan. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. p. 210. ISBN 9780824827533.
  6. ^ Gössmann, Hilaria (1995). "The Quest for Emancipation: The Autobiographical Novels of Miyamoto Yuriko and Sata Ineko". Japan Quarterly. XLII (3). Tokyo: 332–342.
  7. ^ a b Shibata Schierbeck, Sachiko, ed. (1994). "Writers of Social Protests, 1916–1930: Sata Ineko". Japanese Women Novelists in the 20th Century: 104 Biographies, 1900-1993. Museum Tusculanum Press. pp. 55–59.
  8. ^ a b Hayter, Irena; Sipos, George T.; Williams, Mark, eds. (2021). Tenkō: Cultures of Political Conversion in Transwar Japan. Routledge.
  9. ^ Buchheim, Eveline; Futselaar, Ralf, eds. (2014). Under Fire: Women and World War II. Yearbook of Women's History/Jaarboek voor Vrouwengeschiedenis 34. Verloren. p. 47.
  10. ^ Mackie, Vera (1997). "Narratives of struggle: writing and the making of socialist women in Japan". In Tipton, Elise K. (ed.). Society and the State in Interwar Japan. Routledge.
  11. ^ Martin, Douglas (20 July 2007). "Kenji Miyamoto, 98, Leader of Japan's Communist Party, Dies". The New York Times. Retrieved 1 October 2021.
  12. ^ Ericson, Joan E. (1997). Be a Woman: Hayashi Fumiko and Modern Japanese Women's Literature. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press. ISBN 9780824818845.
  13. ^ Yamamoto, Mari (2004). "A revival of grassroots activities and the post-war education of women". Grassroots Pacifism in Post-War Japan: The Rebirth of a Nation. RoutledgeCurzon.
  14. ^ Keene, Donald (1998). Dawn to the West: Japanese Literature in the Modern Era (2 ed.). New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-11435-4.
  15. ^ "佐多稲子 (Ineko Sata)". Kotobank (in Japanese). Retrieved 9 October 2021.
  16. ^ "所蔵品検索 木立 池野清 (Collection Search: Tree Kiyoshi Ikeno)". Nagasaki Prefectural Art Museum (in Japanese). Retrieved 5 November 2021.
  17. ^ "時に佇つ (Toki ni tatsu)". Kotobank (in Japanese). Retrieved 10 October 2021.

External links edit

Further reading edit

  • Shibata Schierbeck, Sachiko, ed. (1994). "Writers of Social Protests, 1916–1930: Sata Ineko". Japanese Women Novelists in the 20th Century: 104 Biographies, 1900-1993. Museum Tusculanum Press. pp. 55–60.
  • Loftus, Ronald P. (2004). Telling Lives: Women's Self-writing in Modern Japan. University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 0-8248-2834-8.
  • Frédéric, Louis (2002). Japan Encyclopedia. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. p. 826.