Episodios

  • Christianity in Japanese Literature
    Jun 5 2025

    In this episode, we look into the history of Christianity in Japan—especially the role Christianity has played in Japanese literature. Our focus text is Shusaku Endo's Silence.

    Notes and sources on the episode page. Transcript available.

    Let RJL know what you think! (Contact us through the website if you want a response.)

    Please note that text messages are for feedback only. RJL can't respond directly.
    Get in touch at www.readjapaneseliterature.com.
    Support RJL on Patreon.com.
    Buy your books from Bookshop.org.
    All content © 2024 Read Japanese Literature.

    Más Menos
    1 h y 2 m
  • Japanese Writers Standing Up to the State
    Mar 18 2025

    In this episode, we take a look at the Japanese proletarian writers’ movement of the 1920s and early 1930s. We also take a deep dive into the life of author Genzaburo Yoshino—not a proletarian writer, but a man who spent prison alongside them and for some of the same beliefs—and his novel How Do You Live?.

    Notes and sources on the episode page. Transcript available.

    Let RJL know what you think! (Contact us through the website if you want a response.)

    Please note that text messages are for feedback only. RJL can't respond directly.
    Get in touch at www.readjapaneseliterature.com.
    Support RJL on Patreon.com.
    Buy your books from Bookshop.org.
    All content © 2024 Read Japanese Literature.

    Más Menos
    1 h y 4 m
  • Keiichiro Hirano
    Feb 5 2025

    For the first time ever, RJL brings you information from an interview with a Japanese author—Akutagawa-winner Keiichiro Hirano. This episode takes up his life and work, the influence of Yukio Mishima on his fiction, and his most-recently-translated novel, Eclipse.

    CW: attempted suicide in a discussion of Yukio Mishima's The Temple of the Golden Pavilion

    Notes and sources on the episode page. Transcript available.

    Let RJL know what you think! (Contact us through the website if you want a response.)

    Please note that text messages are for feedback only. RJL can't respond directly.
    Get in touch at www.readjapaneseliterature.com.
    Support RJL on Patreon.com.
    Buy your books from Bookshop.org.
    All content © 2024 Read Japanese Literature.

    Más Menos
    52 m
  • Christmas in Japanese Literature
    Dec 14 2024

    Happy holidays! And, in the interest of today’s episode, merri kurisumasu!

    Today we’re going to start with the origins of Christmas, especially why Christmas is celebrated in Japan at all. We’ll move on to how Christmas is celebrated in Japan. And we’ll end with some examples of what part Christmas seems to play in Japanese literature—or at least Japanese literature that gets translated.

    Notes and sources on the episode page. Transcript available.

    Let RJL know what you think! (Contact us through the website if you want a response.)

    Please note that text messages are for feedback only. RJL can't respond directly.
    Get in touch at www.readjapaneseliterature.com.
    Support RJL on Patreon.com.
    Buy your books from Bookshop.org.
    All content © 2024 Read Japanese Literature.

    Más Menos
    52 m
  • LGBTQ+ Stories from Japan, Part 2
    Dec 1 2024

    RJL is excited to bring you this two-parter about LGBTQ+ stories from Japan. Part two covers Taisho Japan (when women finally enter the stage) through through contemporary LGBTQ+ writing, especially the life and work of Nobuko Yoshiya, Edogawa Ranpo, Yukio Mishima, and Li Kotomi. We also spend a little time on the role of queer manga.

    Part one covered some of the earliest writing in Japanese through the end of the Meiji Period in 1912.

    Notes and sources on the episode page. Transcript available.

    This episode is rated mature.

    CW for the two-part series: historical accounts of practices today recognized as pedophilia and pederasty, mentions of suicide and suicidal ideation (fictional and historical), rape, homophobia, harassment of a trans author

    Let RJL know what you think! (Contact us through the website if you want a response.)

    Please note that text messages are for feedback only. RJL can't respond directly.
    Get in touch at www.readjapaneseliterature.com.
    Support RJL on Patreon.com.
    Buy your books from Bookshop.org.
    All content © 2024 Read Japanese Literature.

    Más Menos
    58 m
  • LGBTQ+ Stories from Japan, Part 1
    Oct 30 2024

    RJL is excited to bring you this two-parter about LGBTQ+ stories from Japan. Part one covers some of the earliest writing in Japanese through the end of the Meiji Period in 1912.

    Part two (coming soon) covers Taisho Japan (when women finally enter the stage) through some of Japan's contemporary queer writers.

    This episode is rated mature.

    CW for the two-part series: historical accounts of practices today recognized as pedophilia and pederasty, mentions of suicide and suicidal ideation (fictional and historical), rape, homophobia, harassment of a trans author

    Notes and sources on the episode page. Transcript available.

    Let RJL know what you think! (Contact us through the website if you want a response.)

    Please note that text messages are for feedback only. RJL can't respond directly.
    Get in touch at www.readjapaneseliterature.com.
    Support RJL on Patreon.com.
    Buy your books from Bookshop.org.
    All content © 2024 Read Japanese Literature.

    Más Menos
    55 m
  • Japanese Crime and Mystery Writing
    Sep 13 2024

    Today, we’re talking about crime and mystery novels from Japan. We’ll start with the development of the crime and mystery genre in the English-speaking world. We’ll move on to Japanese crime and mystery writing—how it was inspired by Anglo-American crime and mystery writing and how it evolved in its own way. And we’ll end with the life and work of writer Seishi Yokomizo, especially his novel The Honjin Murders, translated into English by Louise Heal Kawai.

    Notes and sources on the episode page. Transcript available.

    CW: murder (obviously!) and a brief mention of a fictional character’s narcotics addiction

    (Apologies for small pronunciation issues of English and French surnames. They’ve been corrected in the transcript.)



    Let RJL know what you think! (Contact us through the website if you want a response.)

    Please note that text messages are for feedback only. RJL can't respond directly.
    Get in touch at www.readjapaneseliterature.com.
    Support RJL on Patreon.com.
    Buy your books from Bookshop.org.
    All content © 2024 Read Japanese Literature.

    Más Menos
    54 m
  • Atomic Bomb Literature
    Aug 17 2024

    This episode is marked mature.

    In this episode, we take a look at Japanese writing about the American bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki that killed as many as 215,000 people in August 1945. We’ll start with the history of the atomic bomb, its use, and its effects on the hibakusha who survived. Then we’ll take a look at atomic bomb literature itself. Our focus text is "Masks of Whatchamacallit" by Kyoko Hayashi (follow the link to read for free), translated by Kyoko Selden.

    CW: war, illness (historical and fictional), suicide (historical), forced abortion (fictional), emotional abuse (fictional)

    Notes and sources on the episode page. Transcript available.

    Let RJL know what you think! (Contact us through the website if you want a response.)

    Please note that text messages are for feedback only. RJL can't respond directly.
    Get in touch at www.readjapaneseliterature.com.
    Support RJL on Patreon.com.
    Buy your books from Bookshop.org.
    All content © 2024 Read Japanese Literature.

    Más Menos
    59 m