Plus d’un million de livres, à portée de main !
Bookbot

Hayashi Fumiko

    Fumiko Hayashi était une auteure japonaise dont les œuvres se concentrent souvent sur des femmes libres d'esprit et des relations tumultueuses. Son écriture se distingue par ses thèmes féministes et son portrait perspicace de l'humanité des personnages, en particulier ceux qui se trouvent en marge de la société japonaise. Le style de Hayashi est loué pour sa clarté et sa capacité à transmettre de l'empathie pour ses personnages, offrant aux lecteurs un aperçu puissant de leur vie intérieure et de leur position sociale.

    Days & Nights: Stories of classic Japanese women's literature
    • 2021

      Women authors have played an important role in Japanese literature for centuries, for example Murasaki Shikibu who wrote "The Tale of Genji" over 1000 years ago, which is considered to be the world's first novel. The last few decades have seen compelling works by authors such as Banana Yoshimoto, Yoko Ogawa, and Mieko Kawakami. A few decades earlier we find another group of influential women authors, with Hayashi Fumiko--said to be one of the most important twentieth-century Japanese woman authors--a key representative of this group. Living a life of poverty until her breakthrough as an author, Hayashi Fumiko was known for her realistic depictions of urban working-class life, especially impoverished women. Her works typically address themes such as fate, troubled relationships, and the repercussions of war. These nine stories are all connected in some way by the overarching theme of human relationships. Stories from a variety of genres are included: a tale of a woman's gradual downfall in the big city, a couple's struggle to find happiness, a fairy tale about an estranged crane family, a comical look at a traveler enamored by a maid, and a man wandering through the remnants of post-war Tokyo.

      Days & Nights: Stories of classic Japanese women's literature