9-648: (Redirected from Nakajo ) Nakajō (中城, 中条, 仲条, 仲城) is a Japanese surname. It can also refer to: People [ edit ] Fumiko Nakajō ( 中城 ふみ子 , 1922–1954) , Japanese tanka poet Hiroyuki Nakajo ( 中條 公行 , 1946–2020) , Japanese sport shooter Hisaya Nakajo ( 中条 比紗也 , 1973–2023) , Japanese manga artist Places in Japan [ edit ] Nakajō, Nagano Nakajō, Niigata Nakajō Station Uonuma-Nakajō Station Other [ edit ] Kunito Nakajo (仲条 國士), of Shonan Junai Gumi Nakajo syndrome ,
18-584: A Woman ), based on Nakajō's life. It was directed by Kinuyo Tanaka and starred Yumeji Tsukioka , Ryoji Hayama and Yōko Sugi . The Eternal Breasts The Eternal Breasts ( 乳房よ永遠なれ , Chibusa yo eien nare ) , also titled Forever a Woman , is a 1955 Japanese drama film directed by actress Kinuyo Tanaka . It is based on the life of tanka poet Fumiko Nakajō (1922–1954). Unhappily married Fumiko, mother of two children, divorces her drug-addicted husband after an incident which she regards as an act of unfaithfulness, and moves back to her mother. At
27-592: A powerful instance of women's creativity and self-expression", Alexander Jacoby sees the "feminist and progressive" theme of a woman willingly choosing career over marriage obscured by the film's concentration on her illness, thus shying away from the more controversial implications. The Eternal Breasts has seen repeated screenings at festivals and film museums in the US, in France and in Germany. The British Film Institute included
36-614: A rare autosomal recessive congenital disorder Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Nakajō . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Nakajō&oldid=1182245959 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Disambiguation pages with surname-holder lists Japanese-language surnames Hidden categories: Articles containing Japanese-language text Short description
45-486: A scholar of Japanese literature. Married in 1942, she gave birth to four children before the marriage was divorced. Diagnosed with breast cancer , she underwent mastectomies in 1952 and 1953. Shortly before her death in 1954, a series of her poems were printed in Tanka kenkyū and Tanka magazines with the recommendation of writer Yasunari Kawabata , and her first book, the collection Chibusa sōshitsu (乳房喪失, Losing My Breasts ),
54-517: A short affair with journalist Ōtsuki, who writes about her in a newspaper series before she finally dies. Shot largely on location in Hokkaidō, filming took place a year after the death of Nakajō . The Eternal Breasts is unanimously highly regarded for its directorial skills, yet film scholars differ in their evaluation of the themes addressed in the film. While Alejandra Armendáriz-Hernández calls it "a daring depiction of female sexuality […] as well as
63-658: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Fumiko Nakaj%C5%8D Fumiko Nakajō (中城ふみ子 Nakajō Fumiko , real name 野江富美子 Noe Fumiko , November 25, 1922 in Obihiro , Hokkaidō – August 3, 1954 in Sapporo ) was a Japanese tanka poet. Fumiko Nakajō attended the Tokyo Academy of Home Economics (later Tokyo Kasei-Gakuin University ) and studied tanka with Ikeda Kikan (1896–1956),
72-515: The same time, she tries to find her voice as a poet, regularly attending a poetry circle, encouraged by her married tutor Hori, whom she loves with a respectful distance. While struggling with the divorce and the fact that she could only take her daughter with her, she is diagnosed with late-stage breast cancer . She undergoes a double mastectomy , which she writes about in a series of widely noticed and prize-winning poems, and tries to live her life as freely as possible and as her illness allows. She has
81-648: Was published. A second collection, Hana no genkei (花の原型, A Prototype of Flowers ), appeared posthumously. Many of her poems addressed her illness, and she sometimes altered the tanka form to make it more expressive. There are memorials to her at the Tokachi Gokoku Shrine, beside the Obihiro Shrine, and behind the Obihiro Centennial Memorial Hall. In 1955, Nikkatsu studios produced the film The Eternal Breasts (also known as Forever
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