Background
Chiyo Uno was born on November 28, 1897 in a section of Iwakuni known as Kawanishi, "west of the river".
(In 1933, Uno published the novel Confessions of Love (色ざん...)
In 1933, Uno published the novel Confessions of Love (色ざんげ, Iro-zange), which brought her much fame. The book details an artist and his various love affairs, and a suicide attempt with his mistress. Uno not only had a romance with Seiji Tōgō, the artist the novel was based on, but she then turned their involvement into a best-selling story. She also wrote convincingly from the perspective of a man in Confessions of Love, which further added to her book’s appeal.
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1933
千代 宇野
magazine editor novelist short story writer serial writer
Chiyo Uno was born on November 28, 1897 in a section of Iwakuni known as Kawanishi, "west of the river".
In 1914 Chiyo Uno graduated from Iwakuni Girls High School.
In 1933, Chiyo Uno published the novel Confessions of Love, which brought her much fame. Shortly after the success of Confessions of Love, Uno started a magazine called Sutairu, or Style, which was the first of its kind in Japan to focus on foreign fashions. In terms of her own native fashion, Uno also proved talented at designing kimonos. Style took up much of her time through the following decades, yet she continued to write and to intrigue a faithful audience of Japanese women, who found a sense of liberation in Uno’s prose.
Uno also became successful as a kimono designer, and along with her assistant designer Tomiyo Hanazawa, Uno traveled to the United States to stage the first kimono fashion show in the United States in 1957.
In later years, Uno’s popularity was given formal status as she was recognized by the Emperor and assumed the honor of being one of Japan’s oldest and most talented female writers. In 1983 she published the memoir I Will Go On Living (Ikite Yuku Watakushi), which was widely read and adapted for television. She frankly stated that the essence of her life was to have not followed anyone else's rules and to have done as she pleased.
(In 1933, Uno published the novel Confessions of Love (色ざん...)
1933Like many young Japanese of the 1920s, Uno was fascinated with American and European culture and dress and was one of the first women in Japan to bob her hair like a flapper. Beyond hairstyles, Uno also began to pursue the life of a free-spirited woman. She wanted to be a mo ga, or modern girl, and not confined to just the role of supportive wife and mother. She became part of the Bohemian world of Tokyo, having liaisons with other writers, poets and painters.
Chiyo Uno married to a farmer in Hokkaido, but following an initial literary success and winning of a short story prize, Uno left her husband and moved to Tokyo where she worked in a bar. Later lived with Shiro Ozaki, a writer, and then with Seiji Togo, a painter. Then she married to Takeo Kitahara. Married often with varying success, Uno found it difficult to stick with just one man, and it was said that she would even move to a new house every time a major affair or marriage ended.