Makoto Ueda (poetry critic)
Makoto Ueda (上田 真, Ueda Makoto, 1931 – August 19, 2020) was a professor emeritus of Japanese literature at Stanford University.[1][2] Ueda won the Japan–U.S. Friendship Commission Prize for the Translation of Japanese Literature in 1996 for his translated anthology Modern Japanese Tanka (Columbia University Press, 1996).[3]
Education and career
He earned a Ph.D. in comparative literature in 1961.
In 2004–2005 he served as the honorary curator of the American Haiku Archives at the California State Library in Sacramento, California. He was given that honor "in recognition of Ueda’s many decades of academic writing about haiku and related genres and his leading translations of Japanese haiku." The library added that "Ueda has been our most consistently useful source for information on Japanese haiku, as well as our finest source for the poems in translation, from Bashô to the present day."[4] His work on female poets and 20th century poets "had an enormous impact".[5]
Bibliography
He is an author of numerous books about Japanese literature and in particular Haiku, Senryū, Tanka, and Japanese poetics.[5]
- The Old Pine Tree (1962)
- Literary and Art Theories in Japan (1967)
- Matsuo Bashō: The Master Haiku Poet (1970)
- Modern Japanese Haiku, an Anthology (1976)
- Modern Japanese Writers and the Nature of Literature (1976)
- Explorations: Essays in Comparative Literature (1986)
- Bashō and His Interpreters: Selected Hokku With Commentary (1992)
- Modern Japanese Tanka (1996)
- Modern Japanese Writers and the Nature of Literature (1996)
- The Path of Flowering Thorn: The Life and Poetry of Yosa Buson (1998).
- Light Verse from the Floating World: An Anthology of Premodern Japanese Senryu (2000)
- Far Beyond the Field: Haiku by Japanese Women (2003)
- Dew on the Grass: The Life and Poetry of Kobayashi Issa (2004)
- Mother of Dreams: Portrayals of Women in Modern Japanese Fiction (2004)
References
- ^ "Makoto Ueda, Stanford Japanese literature professor emeritus, dies at 89". Stanford University. 2 October 2020. Retrieved 8 January 2021.
- ^ "Emeriti Faculty". East Asian Languages and Cultures. Stanford University. Archived from the original on 29 March 2013. Retrieved 6 May 2014.
- ^ "Archive of past prize winners for the Japan-U.S. Friendship Commission Prize for the Translation of Japanese Literature". Donald Keene Center. Retrieved 26 February 2024.
- ^ "Honorary Curator Makoto Ueda". American Haiku Archives. Retrieved 6 May 2014.
- ^ a b Luckring, Eve. "True Before It Is Made Truth: An Interview with Makoto Ueda". American Haiku Archives. Retrieved 6 May 2014.
- Articles with short description
- Short description is different from Wikidata
- Articles containing Japanese-language text
- Articles with ISNI identifiers
- Articles with VIAF identifiers
- Articles with WorldCat Entities identifiers
- Articles with BNF identifiers
- Articles with BNFdata identifiers
- Articles with GND identifiers
- Articles with J9U identifiers
- Articles with KBR identifiers
- Articles with LCCN identifiers
- Articles with NDL identifiers
- Articles with NKC identifiers
- Articles with NTA identifiers
- Articles with PLWABN identifiers
- Articles with SUDOC identifiers
- American literary critics
- Japanese literary critics
- Scholars of Japanese literature
- American writers of Japanese descent
- American academics of Japanese descent
- English-language writers from Japan
- Japanese emigrants to the United States
- 1931 births
- 2020 deaths
- All stub articles
- American academic biography stubs
- Asian American stubs