The Makioka Sisters (Sasameyuki)

The Makioka Sisters (Sasameyuki)

Junichiro Tanizaki, Edward G. Seidensticker (translation)
0 / 5.0
How much do you like this book?
What’s the quality of the file?
Download the book for quality assessment
What’s the quality of the downloaded files?
Four daughters of an old merchant family unknowingly face the end of a gentler way of life in Osaka, Japan in 1938.

Junichirō Tanizaki’s magisterial evocation of a proud Osaka family in decline during the years immediately before World War II is arguably the greatest Japanese novel of the 20th century & a classic of international literature.

Tsuruko, the eldest sister of the once-wealthy Makioka family, clings obstinately to the prestige of her family name even as her husband prepares to move their household to Tokyo, where that name means nothing. Sachiko compromises valiantly to secure the future of her younger sisters. The shy, unmarried Yukiko is a hostage to her family’s exacting standards, while the spirited Taeko rebels by flinging herself into scandalous romantic alliances and dreaming of studying fashion design in France.

Filled with vignettes of a vanishing way of life, The Makioka Sisters is a poignant yet unsparing portrait of a family—and an entire society—sliding into the abyss of modernity. It possesses in abundance the keen social insight & unabashed sensuality that distinguish Tanizaki as a master novelist.

°°°

Junichiro Tanizaki was born in Tokyo in 1886 and lived in the city until the earthquake of 1923, when he moved to the Kyoto-Osaka region, the scene of one of his most well-known novels, The Makioka Sisters (1943-48). The author of over twenty books, including Naomi (1924), Some Prefer Nettles (1928), Arrowroot (1931), and A Portrait of Shunkin (1933), Tanizaki also published translations of the Japanese classic, The Tale of Genji in 1941, 1954, & 1965. Several of his novels, including Quicksand (1930), The Key (1956), & Diary of a Mad Old Man (1961) were made into movies. He was awarded Japan’s Imperial Prize in Literature in 1949, and in 1965 he became the first Japanese writer to be elected as an honorary member of the American Academy & the National Institute of Arts & Letters. Tanizaki died in 1965.

Content Type:
Books
Year:
2010
Edition:
Original title: 細雪 (Sasameyuki)
Publisher:
Vintage Digital, Penguin Random House UK
Language:
english
Pages:
576
ISBN 10:
1407053752
ISBN 13:
9781407053752
Series:
Serialized from 1943 to 1948
File:
EPUB, 696 KB
IPFS:
CID , CID Blake2b
english, 2010
Download (epub, 696 KB)
Conversion to is in progress
Conversion to is failed

Most frequently terms