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| caption =
| caption =
| birth_date = {{birth date|1921|11|24|mf=y}}
| birth_date = {{birth date|1921|11|24|mf=y}}
| birth_place = [[Alameda, California]], US
| birth_place = [[Alameda, California]], U.S.
| death_date = {{death date and age|1992|06|21|1921|11|24}}
| death_date = {{death date and age|1992|06|21|1921|11|24}}
| death_place = [[Berkeley, California]], US<ref name=nytimes>{{citation |title= Yoshiko Uchida, 70, A Children's Author | newspaper=[[The New York Times]] |date=June 24, 1992 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1992/06/24/obituaries/yoshiko-uchida-70-a-children-s-author.html}}</ref>
| death_place = [[Berkeley, California]], U.S.<ref name=nytimes>{{citation |title= Yoshiko Uchida, 70, A Children's Author | newspaper=[[The New York Times]] |date=June 24, 1992 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1992/06/24/obituaries/yoshiko-uchida-70-a-children-s-author.html}}</ref>
| occupation = Writer
| occupation = Writer
| genre = fiction, [[Folklore|folktales]], nonfiction, autobiography
| genre = fiction, [[Folklore|folktales]], nonfiction, autobiography
| movement = Folk Art Movement
| movement = Folk Art Movement
| spouse =
| spouse =
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}}
}}


'''Yoshiko Uchida''' (November 24, 1921 – June 21, 1992) was a [[Japanese Americans|Japanese American]] writer of children's books intended to share Japanese and Japanese-American history and culture with Japanese American children. She is most known for her series of books, starting with ''Journey to Topaz'' (1971) that took place during the era of the mass removal and [[Internment of Japanese Americans|incarceration of Japanese Americans]] during WWII. She also authored an adult memoir centering on her and her family's wartime internment (''Desert Exile,'' 1982), a young adult version her life story (''Invisible Thread'', 1991), and a novel centering on a Japanese American family (''Picture Bride'', 1987).<ref name="niiya" />
'''Yoshiko Uchida''' (November 24, 1921 – June 21, 1992) was a [[Japanese American]] writer.


==Early life==
==Early life==


Yoshiko Uchida was born in Alameda, California on November 24, 1921, the daughter of Takashi ("Dwight," 1884-1971) and Iku Umegaki Uchida (1893-1966). She had an older sister, Keiko ("Kay," 1918-2008, mother of former New York Times book critic [[Michiko Kakutani]] and married to mathematician [[Shizuo Kakutani]]).<ref name=niiya>{{cite web | last = Niiya | first = Bruce | title=Yoshiko Uchida|url=http://encyclopedia.densho.org/Yoshiko_Uchida/|publisher=[[Densho: The Japanese American Legacy Project|Densho]]| access-date=2018-07-14}}</ref> She graduated from high school at sixteen and enrolled at [[University of California, Berkeley]].<ref name=niiya/>
Yoshiko Uchida was born in Alameda, California, on November 24, 1921. She was the daughter of Takashi ("Dwight," 1884-1971), and Iku Umegaki Uchida (1893-1966) who were both Issei. Her father, Takashi, was a businessman who worked for ''Mitsui'' before he was interned. Her mother, Iku, who with Yoshika's father graduated from Doshisha University. She also had an older sister, Keiko ("Kay," 1918-2008, mother of former New York Times book critic [[Michiko Kakutani]] and married to mathematician [[Shizuo Kakutani]]).<ref name="niiya">{{cite web |last=Niiya |first=Brian |title=Yoshiko Uchida |url=http://encyclopedia.densho.org/Yoshiko_Uchida/ |access-date=2018-07-14 |publisher=[[Densho: The Japanese American Legacy Project|Densho]]}}</ref>

She attended Longfellow School in Berkeley and University High School in Oakland.<ref name=":1">{{Cite web |title=Finding Aid to the Yoshiko Uchida papers 1903-1994 |url=https://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf0c600134/entire_text/ |access-date=2024-04-01 |website=oac.cdlib.org}}</ref> She graduated from high school in 2 1/2 years and enrolled at [[University of California, Berkeley]].<ref name="niiya" /> In 1942, Uchida graduated from U.C. Berkeley with a B.A. in English, philosophy, and history.<ref name=":1" />


==Internment==
==Internment==
The Uchidas lived in [[Berkeley, California]] and Yoshiko was in her senior year at U.C. Berkeley when the Japanese attacked the naval base at [[Pearl Harbor]] in 1941. Soon after, President [[Franklin D. Roosevelt]] ordered all Japanese Americans on the west coast to be rounded up and [[Japanese internment in the United States|imprisoned in internment camps]]. Uchida's father was questioned by the [[Federal Bureau of Investigation]], and the whole family was interned for three years, first at [[The Shops at Tanforan#Racetrack|Tanforan Racetrack]] in California, and then in [[Topaz War Relocation Center|Topaz, Utah]]. In the camps, Yoshiko taught school and had the chance to view the injustices that the Americans were perpetrating and the varying reactions of Japanese Americans towards their ill-treatment.<ref name=niiya/>
Yoshiko was in her senior year at U.C. Berkeley when the Japanese attacked the naval base at [[Pearl Harbor]] in 1941. Soon after, President [[Franklin D. Roosevelt]] ordered all Japanese Americans on the west coast to be rounded up and [[Japanese internment in the United States|imprisoned in internment camps]]. Uchida's father was questioned by the [[Federal Bureau of Investigation]], and the whole family was interned for three years, first at [[The Shops at Tanforan#Racetrack|Tanforan Racetrack]] in California, and then in [[Topaz War Relocation Center|Topaz, Utah]]. In the camps, Yoshiko taught school and had the chance to view the injustices that the Americans were perpetrating and the varying reactions of Japanese Americans towards their ill-treatment.<ref name=niiya/>


In 1943 Uchida was accepted to graduate school at [[Smith College]] in Massachusetts, and allowed to leave the camp, but her years there left a deep impression. Her 1971 novel, ''[[Journey to Topaz]]'', is fiction, but closely follows her own experiences, and many of her other books deal with issues of [[ethnicity]], [[citizenship]], identity, and cross-cultural relationships.<ref name=niiya/>
In 1943 Uchida was accepted to graduate school at [[Smith College]] in Massachusetts, and allowed to leave the camp, but her years there left a deep impression.<ref name="niiya" /> Her 1971 novel, ''[[Journey to Topaz]]'', is fiction, but closely follows her own experiences, and many of her other books deal with issues of [[ethnicity]], [[citizenship]], identity, and cross-cultural relationships.<ref name=niiya/>


==Career==
==Career==


Over the course of her career, Yoshiko Uchida published more than thirty books, including non-fiction for adults, and [[children's literature|fiction]] for children and teenagers from 1949 to 1991.<ref>{{Cite news |date=1992-06-24 |title=Yoshiko Uchida, 70, A Children's Author |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1992/06/24/obituaries/yoshiko-uchida-70-a-children-s-author.html |access-date=2024-04-08 |work=The New York Times |language=en-US |issn=0362-4331}}</ref>
Uchida became widely known for her 1982 autobiography ''[[Desert Exile]]'', one of several important autobiographical works by Japanese Americans, who were interned that portray internment as a pivotal moment in the formation of the author's [[Identity (social science)|personal]] and [[cultural]] identities.


She is also known for her children's novels, having been praised as "almost single-handedly creating a body of Japanese American literature for children, where none existed before."<ref>''[http://www.bookrags.com/biography/yoshiko-uchida Encyclopedia of World Biography]'', accessed November 7, 2006</ref> In addition to ''[[Journey to Topaz]]'', many of her other novels including ''[[Picture Bride (novel)|Picture Bride]]'', ''[[A Jar of Dreams]]'', and ''[[The Bracelet (novel)|The Bracelet]]'' deal with Japanese American impressions of major historical events including [[World War I]], the [[Great Depression]], and [[World War II]], and the racism endured by Japanese Americans during these years.
Yoshiko's career began in Philadelphia after accepting a teaching job at a Quaker school.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Wallace |first=Nina |date=2021-11-23 |title=Yoshiko Uchida's Remarkable—and Underappreciated—Literary Career |url=https://densho.org/catalyst/yoshiko-uchida-remarkable-underappreciated-literary-career/ |access-date=2024-04-08 |website=Densho: Japanese American Incarceration and Japanese Internment |language=en-US}}</ref> She spent several years there before moving to New York.{{cn|date=June 2024}} Here she worked as a secretary as well as began her writing career. She began submitting her work with no result. her first publication came in 1949 with ''[[The Dancing Kettle and Other Japanese Folk Tales]]''. This is where she began to gain traction in her writing career as she published many more children's books. Through these publications, she was known for creating Japanese American children's literature, as there had never been published works for Asian literature prior. In 1952, she was taken on a 2 year research fellowship in Japan that gave her the information needed to create three more collections of folktales.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2020-07-03 |title=» Yoshiko Uchida Biography {{!}} Life, Facts & Illustrated Books {{!}} Golden Age Children's Book Illustrations |url=https://www.nocloo.com/yoshiko-uchida-biography/ |access-date=2024-04-08 |website=www.nocloo.com |language=en-US}}</ref> In the early 1980's, Uchida traveled, lectured and earned more than 20 awards for her works. During this time, she created her 1982 autobiography, ''[[Desert Exile]],'' examining her experiences of her and her families internment. In addition to ''[[Desert Exile]],'' many of her other novels including ''[[Picture Bride (novel)|Picture Bride]]'', ''[[A Jar of Dreams]]'', and ''[[The Bracelet (Yoshiko Uchida)|The Bracelet]]'' deal with Japanese American impressions of major historical events including [[World War I]], the [[Great Depression]], [[World War II]], and the racism endured by Japanese Americans during these years.


<blockquote>I try to stress the positive aspects of life that I want children to value and cherish. I hope they can be caring human beings who don't think in terms of labels—foreigners or Asians or whatever—but think of people as human beings. If that comes across, then I've accomplished my purpose.<ref name="Grice, Helena 2005">Grice, Helena. "Yoshiko Uchida" in ''Dictionary of Literary Biography, Volume 312: Asian American Writers''. Gale, 2005.</ref></blockquote>
<blockquote>I try to stress the positive aspects of life that I want children to value and cherish. I hope they can be caring human beings who don't think in terms of labels—foreigners or Asians or whatever—but think of people as human beings. If that comes across, then I've accomplished my purpose.<ref name="Grice, Helena 2005">Grice, Helena. "Yoshiko Uchida" in ''Dictionary of Literary Biography, Volume 312: Asian American Writers''. Gale, 2005.</ref></blockquote>

Over the course of her career, Uchida published more than thirty books, including non-fiction for adults, and [[children's literature|fiction]] for children and teenagers. She died in 1992.


==Work on Japanese folk pottery==
==Work on Japanese folk pottery==
In 1952, Uchida received a Ford Foundation Fellowship to study the folk pottery movement in Japan.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Uchida |first1=Yoshiko |title=Fellowship application to John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation; October 11, 1958 |url=https://digitalassets.lib.berkeley.edu/jarda/ucb/text/cubanc_35_1_00265109ta.pdf}}</ref> She spent two years researching and becoming acquainted with major figures in that artistic current, including [[Shoji Hamada]] and [[Kanjiro Kawai]]. Uchida wrote a book with Kawai, ''We Do Not Work Alone: The Thoughts of Kanjiro Kawai''.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Uchida |first1=Yoshiko |title=We Do Not Work Alone: The Thoughts of Kanjiro Kawai |date=1973 |publisher=Kanjiro Kawai's House |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DxErnQEACAAJ}}</ref> She collected several pots by Hamada and Kawai that she later donated to the [[Asian Art Museum (San Francisco)|Asian Art Museum in San Francisco]].<ref>{{cite web |last1=Asian Art Museum |title=Description of plate by Hamada Shoji |url=http://searchcollection.asianart.org/view/objects/asitem/Objects@10228/7/titleSort-asc?t:state:flow=a1a7f2de-bc87-4314-ad3e-23e7a15072e0 |website=Asian Art Museum Online Collection |access-date=20 February 2021}}</ref>
In 1952, Uchida received a Ford Foundation Fellowship to study the folk pottery movement in Japan.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Uchida |first1=Yoshiko |title=Fellowship application to John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation; October 11, 1958 |url=https://digitalassets.lib.berkeley.edu/jarda/ucb/text/cubanc_35_1_00265109ta.pdf}}</ref> She spent two years researching and becoming acquainted with major figures in that artistic current, including [[Shoji Hamada]] and [[Kanjiro Kawai]]. Uchida wrote a book with Kawai, ''We Do Not Work Alone: The Thoughts of Kanjiro Kawai''.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Uchida |first1=Yoshiko |title=We Do Not Work Alone: The Thoughts of Kanjiro Kawai |date=1973 |publisher=Kanjiro Kawai's House |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DxErnQEACAAJ}}</ref> She collected several pots by Hamada and Kawai that she later donated to the [[Asian Art Museum (San Francisco)|Asian Art Museum in San Francisco]].<ref>{{cite web |last1=Asian Art Museum |title=Description of plate by Hamada Shoji |url=http://searchcollection.asianart.org/view/objects/asitem/Objects@10228/7/titleSort-asc?t:state:flow=a1a7f2de-bc87-4314-ad3e-23e7a15072e0 |website=Asian Art Museum Online Collection |access-date=20 February 2021}}</ref>


==Bibliography==
== Awards ==
* Ford Foundation Fellowship<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |title=Mapping Literary Utah - Yoshiko Uchida |url=https://mappingliteraryutah.org/utah-writers/yoshiko-uchida |access-date=2024-04-01 |website=mappingliteraryutah.org |language=en-gb}}</ref>
This is a partial list of Uchida's published work.
* American Library Association's Notable Book citation for ''[[Journey to Topaz]]''
Yoshiko Uchida wrote 34 books.
* Commonwealth club of California Medals in 1972 for [[Samurai of Gold Hill and A Jar of Dreams in 1982|''Samurai of Gold Hill'' and ''A Jar of Dreams'' in 1982]]<ref name=":0" />
* New York Public Library's Best Book of the Year citation in 1983 for ''[[The Best Bad Thing]]''{{cn|date=June 2024}}
* Child Study Association of America Children's Book of the Year in 1985 for ''[[The Happiest Ending]]''<ref name=":0" />
* Japanese American of the Biennium award from the Japanese American Citizens League in 1988{{cn|date=June 2024}}


==Bibliography==
This is a partial list of Uchida's published work. Yoshiko Uchida wrote 34 books.
* ''[[The Dancing Kettle and Other Japanese Folk Tales]]'' (1949)
* ''[[The Dancing Kettle and Other Japanese Folk Tales]]'' (1949)
* ''[[New Friends for Susan]]'' (1951)
* ''[[New Friends for Susan]]'' (1951)
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Example:<ref>Author. "[URL Story name]". Publication. Date. Date Retrieved.</ref>
Example:<ref>Author. "[URL Story name]". Publication. Date. Date Retrieved.</ref>

<Brian Niiya. "[https://encyclopedia.densho.org/Yoshiko_Uchida/]". Densho Encyclopedia. July 2020. February 2022.</ref>


The reference will then add itself to the footnote section.
The reference will then add itself to the footnote section.
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==External links==
==External links==
{{Portal|Literature}}
{{Portal|Literature}}
*Yoshiko Uchida [http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf0c600134/ papers] and [http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/ft6k4007pc/ photographs] (some materials available online) at [[The Bancroft Library]]
* Yoshiko Uchida [http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf0c600134/ papers] and [http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/ft6k4007pc/ photographs] (some materials available online) at [[The Bancroft Library]]
*[http://nwda-db.wsulibs.wsu.edu/findaid/ark:/80444/xv44125 Guide to the Yoshiko Uchida papers at the University of Oregon]
* [https://scua.uoregon.edu/repositories/2/resources/817 Guide to the Yoshiko Uchida papers at the University of Oregon]


{{Authority control}}
{{Authority control}}
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[[Category:American autobiographers]]
[[Category:American autobiographers]]
[[Category:American novelists of Asian descent]]
[[Category:American novelists of Asian descent]]
[[Category:American short story writers]]
[[Category:American women short story writers]]
[[Category:American women short story writers]]
[[Category:American short story writers of Asian descent]]
[[Category:American short story writers of Asian descent]]
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[[Category:20th-century American novelists]]
[[Category:20th-century American novelists]]
[[Category:20th-century American women writers]]
[[Category:20th-century American women writers]]
[[Category:Women autobiographers]]
[[Category:American women autobiographers]]
[[Category:20th-century American short story writers]]
[[Category:20th-century American short story writers]]
[[Category:Novelists from California]]
[[Category:Novelists from California]]

Latest revision as of 09:24, 7 October 2024

Yoshiko Uchida
Born(1921-11-24)November 24, 1921
Alameda, California, U.S.
DiedJune 21, 1992(1992-06-21) (aged 70)
Berkeley, California, U.S.[1]
OccupationWriter
Genrefiction, folktales, nonfiction, autobiography
Literary movementFolk Art Movement
Notable worksThe Invisible Thread
RelativesMichiko Kakutani (niece)[2]

Yoshiko Uchida (November 24, 1921 – June 21, 1992) was a Japanese American writer of children's books intended to share Japanese and Japanese-American history and culture with Japanese American children. She is most known for her series of books, starting with Journey to Topaz (1971) that took place during the era of the mass removal and incarceration of Japanese Americans during WWII. She also authored an adult memoir centering on her and her family's wartime internment (Desert Exile, 1982), a young adult version her life story (Invisible Thread, 1991), and a novel centering on a Japanese American family (Picture Bride, 1987).[3]

Early life

[edit]

Yoshiko Uchida was born in Alameda, California, on November 24, 1921. She was the daughter of Takashi ("Dwight," 1884-1971), and Iku Umegaki Uchida (1893-1966) who were both Issei. Her father, Takashi, was a businessman who worked for Mitsui before he was interned. Her mother, Iku, who with Yoshika's father graduated from Doshisha University. She also had an older sister, Keiko ("Kay," 1918-2008, mother of former New York Times book critic Michiko Kakutani and married to mathematician Shizuo Kakutani).[3]

She attended Longfellow School in Berkeley and University High School in Oakland.[4] She graduated from high school in 2 1/2 years and enrolled at University of California, Berkeley.[3] In 1942, Uchida graduated from U.C. Berkeley with a B.A. in English, philosophy, and history.[4]

Internment

[edit]

Yoshiko was in her senior year at U.C. Berkeley when the Japanese attacked the naval base at Pearl Harbor in 1941. Soon after, President Franklin D. Roosevelt ordered all Japanese Americans on the west coast to be rounded up and imprisoned in internment camps. Uchida's father was questioned by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and the whole family was interned for three years, first at Tanforan Racetrack in California, and then in Topaz, Utah. In the camps, Yoshiko taught school and had the chance to view the injustices that the Americans were perpetrating and the varying reactions of Japanese Americans towards their ill-treatment.[3]

In 1943 Uchida was accepted to graduate school at Smith College in Massachusetts, and allowed to leave the camp, but her years there left a deep impression.[3] Her 1971 novel, Journey to Topaz, is fiction, but closely follows her own experiences, and many of her other books deal with issues of ethnicity, citizenship, identity, and cross-cultural relationships.[3]

Career

[edit]

Over the course of her career, Yoshiko Uchida published more than thirty books, including non-fiction for adults, and fiction for children and teenagers from 1949 to 1991.[5]

Yoshiko's career began in Philadelphia after accepting a teaching job at a Quaker school.[6] She spent several years there before moving to New York.[citation needed] Here she worked as a secretary as well as began her writing career. She began submitting her work with no result. her first publication came in 1949 with The Dancing Kettle and Other Japanese Folk Tales. This is where she began to gain traction in her writing career as she published many more children's books. Through these publications, she was known for creating Japanese American children's literature, as there had never been published works for Asian literature prior. In 1952, she was taken on a 2 year research fellowship in Japan that gave her the information needed to create three more collections of folktales.[7] In the early 1980's, Uchida traveled, lectured and earned more than 20 awards for her works. During this time, she created her 1982 autobiography, Desert Exile, examining her experiences of her and her families internment. In addition to Desert Exile, many of her other novels including Picture Bride, A Jar of Dreams, and The Bracelet deal with Japanese American impressions of major historical events including World War I, the Great Depression, World War II, and the racism endured by Japanese Americans during these years.

I try to stress the positive aspects of life that I want children to value and cherish. I hope they can be caring human beings who don't think in terms of labels—foreigners or Asians or whatever—but think of people as human beings. If that comes across, then I've accomplished my purpose.[8]

Work on Japanese folk pottery

[edit]

In 1952, Uchida received a Ford Foundation Fellowship to study the folk pottery movement in Japan.[9] She spent two years researching and becoming acquainted with major figures in that artistic current, including Shoji Hamada and Kanjiro Kawai. Uchida wrote a book with Kawai, We Do Not Work Alone: The Thoughts of Kanjiro Kawai.[10] She collected several pots by Hamada and Kawai that she later donated to the Asian Art Museum in San Francisco.[11]

Awards

[edit]

Bibliography

[edit]

This is a partial list of Uchida's published work. Yoshiko Uchida wrote 34 books.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Yoshiko Uchida, 70, A Children's Author", The New York Times, June 24, 1992
  2. ^ Kakutani, Michiko (July 13, 2018), "I Know What Incarceration Does to Families. It Happened to Mine.", The New York Times
  3. ^ a b c d e f Niiya, Brian. "Yoshiko Uchida". Densho. Retrieved July 14, 2018.
  4. ^ a b "Finding Aid to the Yoshiko Uchida papers 1903-1994". oac.cdlib.org. Retrieved April 1, 2024.
  5. ^ "Yoshiko Uchida, 70, A Children's Author". The New York Times. June 24, 1992. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved April 8, 2024.
  6. ^ Wallace, Nina (November 23, 2021). "Yoshiko Uchida's Remarkable—and Underappreciated—Literary Career". Densho: Japanese American Incarceration and Japanese Internment. Retrieved April 8, 2024.
  7. ^ "» Yoshiko Uchida Biography | Life, Facts & Illustrated Books | Golden Age Children's Book Illustrations". www.nocloo.com. July 3, 2020. Retrieved April 8, 2024.
  8. ^ Grice, Helena. "Yoshiko Uchida" in Dictionary of Literary Biography, Volume 312: Asian American Writers. Gale, 2005.
  9. ^ Uchida, Yoshiko. "Fellowship application to John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation; October 11, 1958" (PDF).
  10. ^ Uchida, Yoshiko (1973). We Do Not Work Alone: The Thoughts of Kanjiro Kawai. Kanjiro Kawai's House.
  11. ^ Asian Art Museum. "Description of plate by Hamada Shoji". Asian Art Museum Online Collection. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
  12. ^ a b c "Mapping Literary Utah - Yoshiko Uchida". mappingliteraryutah.org. Retrieved April 1, 2024.
[edit]