New Books Network

Anne Sokolsky ed., "Bold Breaks: Japanese Women and Literary Narratives of Divorce" (U Hawaii Press, 2025)

Jan 20, 2026
Anne Sokolsky, a Professor of Japanese literature focusing on gender studies, dives into her new work, highlighting how Japanese literature depicts divorce from the Heian to Heisei periods. She discusses the various terms for divorce in Japanese and their cultural implications. Sokolsky reveals how authors like Tamura Toshiko used divorce as a narrative device for women's liberation. The podcast also explores modern perspectives on marriage and custody laws, making a compelling case for the ongoing relevance of these literary narratives.
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ANECDOTE

Peace Corps Shaped Her Scholarship

  • Anne Sokolsky recounts joining the Peace Corps and teaching in Morocco, which profoundly shaped her interest in women's studies.
  • She learned languages best in-country and gained awareness of women's precarious positions across societies.
ANECDOTE

Tamura Toshiko's Formative Family Story

  • Anne Sokolsky describes Tamura Toshiko’s upbringing in a divorced, working-class household that influenced her writing.
  • Tamura’s mother was unconventional and Tamura often depicts unsupportive mothers in her fiction.
INSIGHT

Diverse Japanese Terms Reveal Divorce Nuance

  • Japanese has multiple words for divorce that reveal varied legal and social meanings across history.
  • Terms like rikon, rien, and enkiri show divorce was nuanced and present long before Western influence.
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