Shizu Shiraki
Shizu Shiraki (素木 しづ, Shiraki Shizu, March 26, 1895–January 29, 1918) was a Japanese author. She contracted tuberculosis after middle school and had her leg amputated at age 17, after which she took fiction writing lessons from Morita Sōhei, started writing, and wrote throughout the six years until her death.[1] According to scholar Barbara Hartley, Shiraki's willingness to write about body-related issues, such as menstruation, "marks her as singularly incisive and even subversive."[2]
See also
- Japanese literature
- List of Japanese authors
References
- Tanaka, Yukiko (2000). Women Writers of Meiji and Taisho Japan: Their Lives, Works and Critical Reception, 1868-1926. McFarland. pp. 118–121. ISBN 9780786408528.
- Hartley, Barbara (2012). "4: Volatility and diversity: Shiraki Shizu and the reading girl". In Aoyama, Tomoko; Hartley, Barbara (eds.). Girl Reading Girl in Japan. Routledge. p. 69. ISBN 9781135247959.
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