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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Amazing clarity and pathos from a self-educated woman,
By Molly Bresnen (Japan) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Prison Memoirs of a Japanese Woman (Foremother Legacies Series) (Paperback)
I originally had to read this book for a Japanese History class, and found it incredible. In the 1930's it was standard practice to take a written confession from prisoners before execution, but this one stood out and has survived to the present day for its insight and honesty. This is a person who, after unthinkable suffering acheived not only complete self-realization but the ability to communicate it to others. It's also facinating because, despite so much spilt ink about understanding the conservative Japanese psyche, this is one of the only non-fiction works which effectively and honestly tackles communal mentality and social hierarcy without over-complicating the issue. But beyond that, it is an incredible story not unlike a true-to-life Japanese version of Ellison's Invisible Man. It is a crime that this book is not well known.
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The Prison Memoirs of a Japanese Woman (Foremother Legacies : Autobiographies and Memoirs of Women from Asia, Africa, the Middle East, an... by Fumiko Kaneko (Hardcover - Dec. 1997)
$91.95
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