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Publisher | Artepoetica Press Inc. |
ISBN 13 | 9781940075471 |
ISBN 10 | 1940075475 |
Author | Tinajero Araceli |
Book Format | Paperback |
Language | English |
Book Description | A Mexican young woman goes to Japan in the early 80s. She settles in the country, not knowing Japanese or much about Japanese culture, but eager to absorb both. This she does gradually, in touch with ordinary people who take an interest in her. In very little time the young Mexican is speaking Japanese and integrated into Japanese life, earning a living like ordinary people and learning the details of a culture foreign but alluring to her. Japan enters her heart and becomes a part of her life's project. Years later, having become a professor of Latin American literature in the U.S., and also an interpreter of the Japanese language, she will reminisce about her early experiences in Japan and the process by which she came to love the country. This is the story told in this book: the transformation of a young woman through immersion in a foreign civilization that will become her own intellectually and spiritually. It is the tale of Japan in the heart: Kokoro. |
About the Author | Araceli Tinajero was born and raised in Mexico City. Before joining The City College of New York and the Graduate Center she taught Japanese at the University of Wales and Spanish and Latin American literature at Middlebury College and Yale University. She is the author of Orientalismo en el modernismo hispanoamericano and El Lector: A History of the Cigar Factory Reader. Her editions and co-editions include Cultura y letras cubanas en el siglo XXI, Orientalisms of the Hispanic and Luso-Brazilian World, Exilio y cosmopolitismo en el arte y la literatura hispánica, Technology and Culture in Twentieth Century Mexico, and Handbook on Cuban History, Literature, and the Arts.Daniel Shapiro's publications include the poetry collections The Red Handkerchief and Other Poems (2014) and Woman at the Cusp of Twilight (2016), and three translations: Tomás Harris's Cipango (2010; starred review, Library Journal) and Roberto Ransom's Missing Persons, Animals, and Artists (2017). Shapiro has received translation fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and PEN. He is a Distinguished Lecturer at The City College of New York, CUNY, where he serves as Editor of Review: Literature and Arts of the Americas. |
Publication Date | 5 December 2017 |
Number of Pages | 172 pages |
Kokoro: A Mexican Woman in Japan