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Kyoko Iriye Selden

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Selden (c. 1975)

Kyoko Iriye Selden (Japanese: 入江 恭子, 1936–2013) was a Japanese scholar of Japanese language and literature and a translator.[1]

Biography

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Kyoko Iriye was born in Tokyo. Her father was a journalist reporting from Paris and Shanghai, and her mother was an English teacher. She attended Seikei High School, and wrote a thesis on Wordsworth at the University of Tokyo, before studying English Literature on a Fulbright Scholarship at Yale University. She taught at Cornell University for twenty-five years, and was a literary translator. She was married to Mark Selden, with whom she had three children and four grandchildren.[2]

Selected publications

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Translations into English of Fiction, History, Biography, Early Childhood Education, and Art

  • Kodaira Takashi (ed.), Tenrō haiku no eiyaku: Seishi, Toshio, Ayako (Haiku from the Tenrō School in English Translation: Seishi, Toshio, Ayako) (Yokohama: Shumpūsha, 2014) - translated by Alfred H. Marks and Kyoko Selden.
  • Suzuki Shin’ichi, Nurtured by Love. Revised edition (Van Nuys, CA: Alfred Music Publishing, 2013) - translated by Kyoko Selden with Lili Selden
  • Cho Kyo, The Search for the Beautiful Woman: A Cultural History of Japanese and Chinese Beauty (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2012)
  • Tanaka Shigeki, Everything Depends on How We Raise Them: Educating Young Children by the Suzuki Method (Miami: Summy-Birchard, 2002)
  • Honda Katsuichi, Harukor: An Ainu Woman’s Tale (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2000).
  • Tomioka Taeko, The Funeral of a Giraffe: Seven Stories of Tomioka Taeko (Armonk, NY: M. E. Sharpe, 1999) - translated by Kyoko Selden and Noriko Mizuta.
  • Kayano Shigeru, Our Land Was a Forest: An Ainu Memoir (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, [1994] 1996) - translated by Kyoko Selden and Lili Selden.
  • Suzuki Shin’ichi, Young Children’s Talent Education and Its Method (Miami: SummyBirchard, 1996)
  • Selden, Kyoko and Noriko Mizuta (eds), Japanese Women Writers: Twentieth Century Short Fiction (Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe [1982] 1991) - edited and translated with Noriko Mizuta.
  • Selden, Mark and Kyoko Selden (eds), The Atomic Bomb: Voices from Hiroshima and Nagasaki (Armonk, NY: M. E. Sharpe, 1989)
  • Shimizu Yoshiaki (ed.), Japan: The Shaping of Daimyo Culture, 1185-1868 (Washington, D.C.: National Gallery of Art, Washington, 1989.
  • Suzuki Shin’ichi. Talent Education for Young Children. New Albany, IN: World-Wide Press, 1986)
  • Honda Masaaki, Shinichi Suzuki: Man of Love (Princeton: Birch Tree Group, 1984)
  • Suzuki Shin’ichi, Where Love Is Deep: The Writing of Shin’ichi Suzuki (New Albany, IN: World-Wide Press, 1982)

The Kyoko Iriye Selden Memorial Translation Prize

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Source:[3]

Also known as the Kyoko Selden Translation Prize, this was established in 2014, with contributions from colleagues and friends, to honor Kyoko Iriye Selden's scholarly legacy. The prize is awarded to translations that are at the unpublished stage, to support and encourage translation and publication of Japanese language materials across a broad range.

2021 Winners

  • Excerpts from Shōkenkō 蕉堅稿: The Selected Poems of Zekkai Chūshin 絶海中津 (1336-1405), by Zekkai Chūshin (1336-1405) - translated by Paul Atkins
  • "A Dosimeter on the Narrow Road to Oku" (線量計と奥の細道, 2018), by Durian Sukegawa (ドリアン助川) - translated by Alison Watts

2020 Competition cancelled
2019 Winner

2018 Winners

Honorable Mention: Chapter Four of Ishimure Michiko's historical novel about the Shimabara Rebellion, Birds of Spirit (Anima no tori, 1999) - translated by Bruce Allen 2017 Winners

2016 Winner

2015 Winner

2014 Winners

Further reading

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  • Obituary in The New York Times, 14 Feb 2013.
  • "Selected Works of Kyoko Selden", Review of Japanese Culture and Society, Vol. 27, Special Issue 2015, pp. 279–284. Selected Works by Kyoko Selden

References

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  1. ^ Sato, Hiroaki (25 January 2013). "Noted scholar Kyoko Iriye Selden dies in U.S." The Japan Times. Retrieved 3 November 2021.
  2. ^ "Kyoko Iriye Selden Obituary (2013) New York Times". Legacy.com.
  3. ^ "Selden Memorial Translation Prize 2021 | Department of Asian Studies Cornell Arts & Sciences". asianstudies.cornell.edu.