Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Leza Lowitz

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Name
  
Leza Lowitz


Role
  
Writer

Leza Lowitz wwwworldettecomwpcontentuploads201301Leza

Education
  
University of California, Berkeley, San Francisco State University

Books
  
Yoga Poems, Sacred Sanskrit words, The Japan Journals, 100 Aspects of the Moon, Beautiful Japan: A Souvenir

Author Visit & Workshop by Leza Lowitz


Leza Lowitz (born December 29, 1962, San Francisco) is an American expatriate writer and Yoga instructor residing in Tokyo, Japan. She has written, edited and co-translated over twenty books, many about Japan, its relationship with the U.S.A., on the changing role of Japanese women in literature, art and society, and about the lasting effect of the Second World War and the desire for reconciliation in contemporary Japanese society.

Contents

Leza Lowitz Yoga amp Poetry Opening to Flow The Incredible Poet

YOGA AND POETRY WITH LEZA LOWITZ


Career

Leza Lowitz Writer translator yoga instructor finds inspiration in

During the 1990s, Lowitz helped to bring many modern Japanese poets and fiction writers into English for the first time. She was editor and co-translator with Miyuki Aoyama and Akemi Tomioka of the groundbreaking anthology: A Long Rainy Season: Contemporary Japanese Women’s Poetry (1994), which introduced Western readers to the haiku and tanka (waka) of Fumi Saito, Yuko Kawano, Machi Tawara, Akitsu Ei and thirteen others. Lowitz and Aoyama later published The Collected Tanka of Akitsu Ei (AHA Poetry Press.)

Leza Lowitz The Art of Embracing Uncertainty Interview with Leza

A companion volume, Other Side River: Free Verse (1995) featured contemporary Japanese women free-verse poets in translation. It contains the work of three dozen Japanese women writers, including well-known poets as Shiraishi Kazuko, Ishigaki Rin and Ibaragi Noriko, who appeared alongside emerging Korean-Japanese (Zainichi) poets Chuwol Chong, Kyong Mi Park and Ainu poet Mieko Chikapp, among others. The two volumes, A Long Rainy Season and Other Side River, reflect a variety of literary styles and present an astonishing political and social awareness of women in a still male-centered society. Western readers are offered a new perspective on the lives of contemporary Japanese women. In 1993, she collaborated with the shakuhachi master Christopher Yohmei Blasdel on a series of readings and musical performances from these anthologies throughout Northern California.

Leza Lowitz Leza Lowitz author of Jet Black and the Ninja Wind and

In 1995, Lowitz edited Manoa: Towards a Literature of the Periphery, another anthology of translated Japanese literature, with fiction by Kyoko Murata, Hiromi Itoh, Yoshiko Shibaki, Teru Miyamoto, and Ango Sakaguchi. In 2001, she edited Manoa: Silence to Light: Japan and the Shadows of War, which contained essays by Donald Richie and Ishii Shinpei, last letters of kamikaze pilots (first-time in translation), testimonials from Taiwanese comfort women, voices of student nurses from Okinawa ordered to commit suicide, and war-related fiction and essays by Mishima Yukio, Hayashi Kyoko, Dazai Osamu, Kijima Hajime and Yoko Ogawa. The book also contains manga from Barefoot Gen by Keiji Nakazawa (translated by Frederik Schodt et al.), poetry by Tamura Ryuichi, Ayukawa Nobuo, Ko Un, Sagawa Aki, Ishigaki Choko, and war-related fiction by Mary Yukari Waters and Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston.

In 2003, she and Hisako Ifshin translated the prison-camp haiku of World War II internee Itaru Ina, which appeared in Modern Haiku and later in the Emmy Award-winning documentary film From A Silk Cocoon, directed by Satsuki Ina. Lowitz, Ifshin and with Ralph McCarthy also translated the poetry of pop sculptor cum cultural icon Yayoi Kusama (Violet Obsession) in conjunction with Kusama's solo exhibition touring the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the New York Museum of Modern Art and the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis in 1998/99.

In 2004, Lowitz edited The Japan Journals 1947-2004 by Donald Richie. From the former curator of film at the New York Museum of Modern Art and the leading Western authority on Japanese film, The Japan Journals include post-war encounters with Yasunari Kawabata, D.T. Suzuki, Yukio Mishima, Toru Takemitsu and Bando Tamasaburo.

In 2008, Lowitz with Shogo Oketani translated America and Other Poems by Ayukawa Nobuo. These are war poems by Japan's foremost modernist poet, who was the Japanese translator of T. S. Eliot and a founding member of the Arechi or Waste Land school of poetry, but also an unhappy soldier in the Japanese Imperial Army. This book received the Japan-U.S. Friendship Commission Prize for the Translation of Japanese Literature from The Donald Keene Center of Japanese Culture at New York's Columbia University.

Lowitz first lived in Tokyo from 1989 to 1994, when she worked as a freelance writer/editor for The Japan Times and the Asahi Evening News and was an art critic for Art in America. She lectured on American Literature and Writing at Rikkyo University and Tokyo University. She was a regular book reviewer for KQED Radio’s Pacific Time, covering Asia and the Pacific Rim, and also reviewed books on Asia for The Japan Times and Manoa (1991-2003).

Lowitz's own writing explores the idea of place, displacement and what "home" means to expatriate women. Her 2001 book Yoga Poems: Lines to Unfold By used the Yoga Sutra of Patanjali to structure her personal quest for a spiritual life. The book has appeared in French, Japanese and Persian editions, with individual poems having been translated into Spanish and Burmese as well. She and Reema Datta later co-authored Sacred Sanskrit Words for Yoga, Chant, and Meditation for Stone Bridge Press. She also writes short stories and essays. After a decade in America (1994-2004) she returned to Tokyo, where she opened a yoga studio. She is currently Contributing Editor for the Kyoto Journal.

Lowitz’s work has appeared in hundreds of literary journals including The Huffington Post, Shambhala Sun, Yoga Journal, Best Buddhist Writing of 2011, Harpers, ZYZZYVA, Prairie Schooner, Wingspan (All Nippon Airways in-flight magazine) and anthologies such as Language for A New Century (W.W. Norton), The Columbia Anthology of Modern Japanese Literature, The Poem Behind the Poem: Translating Asian Poetry (Copper Canyon Press), Tomo: Friendship Through Fiction: An Anthology of Japan Teen Stories, My Postwar Life (Chicago Quarterly Review), Expat: Women's True Tales of Life Abroad, The Broken Bridge, An Inn Near Kyoto and RUNES. Lowitz’s fiction has been broadcast on National Public Radio’s “The Sound of Writing” and her art reviews and literary criticism have been published in Art in America, The Asahi Evening News, Sculpture, The Japan Times, The Mainichi News, The Asahi Evening News, The Yomiuri Daily News, The San Francisco Chronicle, The Oakland Tribune, among others. She is a regular contributor to the "Doubletake" column on multicultural life in Wingspan, All-Nippon Airlines in-flight magazine.

Lowitz grew up in San Francisco and Berkeley, and attended Berkeley High School, from which she graduated in 1980. She received her B.A. in English Literature from the University of California at Berkeley in 1984 and her M.A. in Creative Writing from San Francisco State University in 1988, where she briefly taught before moving to Japan. She studied with poets Stan Rice and Robert Hass. She is married to the writer and translator Shogo Oketani, author of J-Boys: Kazuo's World, Tokyo, 1965. Her work is archived in the University of Chicago library's special collection of poetry from Japan.

Honors

  • APALA (Asian/Pacific American Librarians Association) Award in Young Adult Literature for Jet Black and the Ninja Wind.
  • U.S.-Japan Friendship Commission Award for the Translation of Japanese Literature from the Donald Keene Center of Japanese Culture at Columbia University
  • International PEN Oakland Josephine Miles Award for Best Book of Poetry
  • Bay Area Independent Publisher’s Association Award
  • Benjamin Franklin Award for Editorial Excellence for A Long Rainy Season
  • PEN Syndicated Fiction Award
  • Translation Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts
  • California Arts Council Individual Fellowship in Poetry
  • National Endowment for the Humanities Independent Scholar Fellowship
  • Copperfield’s Dickens Fiction Award
  • Barbara Deming Memorial Award in the Novel
  • Japanophile Fiction Award
  • Tokyo Journal Fiction Translation Award for Leipzig of Light and Color by Tawada Yoko (with Gen Watanabe)
  • Book Publications

  • Up from the Sea (Crown Books for Young Readers/Penguin Random House)
  • Here Comes the Sun: A Journey to Adoption in 8 Chakras (Stone Bridge Press)
  • Jet Black and the Ninja Wind (co-authored with Shogo Oketani, Tuttle Publishers)
  • Yoga Heart: Lines on the Six Perfections (Stone Bridge Press)
  • America and Other Poems by Ayukawa Nobuo (co-translated by Shogo Oketani, Kaya Press)
  • Yoga Poems: Lines to Unfold By (Stone Bridge Press)
  • Sacred Sanskrit Words: For Yoga, Chant and Meditation (Stone Bridge Press)
  • The Japan Journals by Donald Richie 1947-2004 (Editor, Stone Bridge Press)
  • Designing with Kanji: Japanese Character Motifs for Surface, Skin & Spirit (Stone Bridge Press)
  • Violet Obsession by Yayoi Kusama (Co-translator, Wandering Mind Books)
  • A Long Rainy Season: Contemporary Japanese Women's Poetry (Volume I, Stone Bridge Press)
  • Other Side River: Contemporary Japanese Women's Poetry (Volume II, Stone Bridge Press)
  • Manoa Journal: Silence to Light: Japan and the Shadows of War (Editor, Univ. of Hawaii Press)
  • Manoa Journal: Towards A Literature of the Periphery (Editor, University of Hawaii Press)
  • Japan: Spirit and Form by Shuichi Kato (Charles E. Tuttle, co-translator with Junko Abe)
  • Beautiful Japan: A Souvenir (Charles E. Tuttle)
  • Green Tea to Go: Short Stories from Tokyo (Printed Matter Press)
  • 100 Aspects of the Moon: Poems (Printed Matter Press)
  • Old Ways to Fold New Paper (Wandering Mind Books)
  • References

    Leza Lowitz Wikipedia