1. A 'fully bloomed' existence for women: Miyamoto [Chūjō] Yuriko in the Soviet Union, 1927-1930.
- Author
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Dobson, Jill
- Subjects
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DIARY (Literary form) , *JAPANESE women authors , *WOMEN ,SOCIAL conditions in the Soviet Union, 1917-1945 - Abstract
As a young woman, the Japanese writer Miyamoto Yuriko travelled to the Soviet Union in late 1927 and was transformed by the experience. In the world's first and only socialist state, she perceived the possibility of equal relationships between men and women that were both emotionally and intellectually satisfying. In Soviet Russia, a woman could be 'fully bloomed': an equal citizen and worker as well as a wife and mother. Through an examination of her two self-narratives based on her time abroad - her diary and the retrospective, autobiographical novel Dōhyō (Signposts) - I will demonstrate how for Yuriko, the political and personal were inseparable. Her whole-hearted endorsement of the USSR and the equality it seemed to offer women was part of the individual journey begun with her love marriage, her divorce, and her relationship with Yuasa Yoshiko, whom she left for Miyamoto Kenji, a committed communist, after her return to Japan. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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