běn zuòzhělièbiǎo
jiāng jiàn sān láng Kenzaburō Ōe
yòu zuǒ Ariyoshi Sawako
běn zhāo shí dài  (1931niányuányuè20rì1984niánbāyuè30rì)

yán qíng describe loving stories (books)zhàn zhēng xīn niàn

yuèdòuyòu zuǒ Ariyoshi Sawakozài小说之家dezuòpǐn!!!
  yòu zuǒ yòu zuǒ , 1931 nián 1 yuè 20 1984 nián 8 yuè 30 shì wèi běn xiǎo shuō jiāchū shēng běn hègē shān xiàn hègē shān shì
  
   zuò pǐn
  
  《 luò yáng
  《 bei
  《 měi ān zhù
  《 jiāng kǒu
  《 chuān
  《 wàng い》
  《 xiāng huá
  《 sān
  《 diàn shí jiān
  《 zhù zuǒ wèi mén dài
  《 lián
  《 yòu tián chuān
  《 fǎn féng
  《 fēi
  《
  《 りこ
  《 gāo chuān
  《 luàn
  《 huá gāng qīng zhōu
  《 chū yúnā guó
  《 xìnのと
  《 hǎi 'àn
  《 'èr rén
  《 zhī ying
  《 zhēn
  《 yáng qiū sān hào guǎn
  《 huǎng rén
  《 guāhuā
  《 zhēn shā fēng
  《 biàn róng
  《 guǐ chuān
  《 rǎn
  《 qīng
  《 gōng yàng liú
  《 è つい
  《 yòu zuǒ zhōng guó
  《 yóu おこん》
  《 běndǎo jīn。》
  《 kāi huá に》
  《 yòu zuǒ xuǎn
  《 yòu zuǒ xuǎn 'èr


  Sawako Ariyoshi (有吉 佐和子 Ariyoshi Sawako?, 20 January 1931- 30 August 1984) was a Japanese writer.
  
  Biography
  
  Born in Wakayama City and a graduate of Tokyo Women's Christian College, Sawako Ariyoshi spent part of her childhood in Java. A prolific novelist, she dramatises significant issues in her fiction such as the suffering of the elderly, the effects of pollution on the environment, and the effects of social and political change on Japanese domestic life and values, especially on the lives of women. Her novel The Twilight Years depicts the life of a working woman who is caring for her elderly, dying father-in-law. Among Ariyoshi's other novels is The River Ki, an insightful portrait of the lives of three rural women: a mother, daughter, and granddaughter. Her novel The Doctor's Wife, a historical novel dramatising the roles of nineteenth-century Japanese women as it chronicles the experience of a pioneer doctor with breast cancer surgery, has identified her as one of the finest postwar Japanese women writers. The Doctor's Wife (1966) is considered as her best novel. Starting in 1949, Ariyoshi studied literature and theatre at the Tokyo Women's Christian College until she graduated in 1952. In 1959 she spent a year at the Sarah Lawrence College in New York. She then worked with a publishing company and also wrote for journals, joined a dance troupe, and wrote short stories and scripts for various media. She travelled extensively, getting material for her serialized novels of domestic life, mostly dealing with social issues. Recipient of a Rockefeller Foundation Fellowship in 1959, Ariyoshi had received some Japanese literary awards and was at the height of her career when she died quietly in her sleep.
  [edit]Works
  
  Kinokawa "The River Ki" (1964) - deals with aristocratic women.
  Hishoku "Not Because of Color" (1964) - deals with racism
  The Doctor's Wife (1966) - best known work
  Jiuta (1967)
  Jiuta "Ballad" 1956
  Shiroi ōgi "The White Folding Fan" 1957
  Kiyu no shi "The Death of Kiyu" 1962
  Izumo no Okuni (the book) "Kabuki Dancer" (1969) -fictionalized account of the life of the inventor of kabuki.
  Kōkotsu no hito "The Twilight Years" (1972) -deals with ageism
  Fukugō osen "The Complex Contamination" (1975) -deals with pollution
  Kazu no miyasama otome "Her Highness Princess Kazu" 1978
  Chūgoku repōto "China Report" 1978
    

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