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Mitsuhashi Takajo
Japanese haiku poet

Mitsuhashi Takajo

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Intro
Japanese haiku poet
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Work field
Gender
Female
Place of birth
Narita, Chiba Prefecture, Japan
Age
73 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Mitsuhashi Takajo or Takajo Mitsuhashi (三橋 鷹女; born Fumiko Matsuhashi (三橋 たか) near Narita, Chiba on 24 January 1899; died 7 April 1972) was a haiku poet of the Shōwa period.

Biography

Mitsuhashi Takajo was born near Narita. She was an admirer of Akiko Yosano and her father wrote tanka. In 1922 she married Kenzō (東 謙三), a dentist who wrote haiku and that influenced her to switch to haiku herself. By 1936 she became part of a group that founded the short-lived Kon (dark blue) publication and in 1940 had the collection Himawari or Sunflowers published. The war proved difficult for her family and in 1953 she became involved in a progressive magazine of avant-garde poets who allowed experimental haiku. Her last collection, in 1970, dealt somewhat with death as she had been ill for years.

Legacy and image

She has been referred to as a religious ascetic or one who led a life of asceticism and spiritual concentration. She is said to have written works of self-alienation and the Void. A statue of her is at Shinshoji Temple.

She is also placed as one of the "4 Ts" of Japanese female haiku poets. The other three are Tatsuko Hoshino, Nakamura Teijo, and Hashimoto Takako.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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