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SPEAKER_07: Hello from Wonder Media Network. I'm Luvvie Ajayi-Jones. I'm a New York Times best-selling author, speaker, and host of the podcast, Professional Troublemaker. I'm so excited to be your guest host for this month of Womanica. This month, we're highlighting prodigies, women who achieved greatness at a young age. This is especially a passion point for me because my latest book, Rising Troublemaker, a fear fighter manual for teens, is about the power of the world. In a society that was designed to limit women's success, today's prodigy defied the odds to become one of the most prominent writers of her time. Through her stories of life during Japan's Meiji era, she found beauty in everyday challenges. Let's talk about Higuchi Ichiyo. I'm a young woman who was born in Japan. I was born in Japan. I was born in Japan. I was born in Japan. I was born in Japan. I was born in Japan. Higuchi Ichiyo was born Natsuko Higuchi on May 2nd, 1872, in Tokyo. Japan was in the middle of a reconstruction period known as the Meiji era. After years of global self-isolation, Japan felt they'd fallen behind the Western world. To remedy this, they abolished the class system and began to modernize. But this rapid modernization hurt women. They were pressured to only fulfill the roles of wives and mothers. Education for girls was not a priority. They were required to attend just six years of school before dedicating their lives to more domestic tasks. Women were seen as property. As a child, Higuchi was shy and quiet, but she loved reading stories about superheroes and adventure. Higuchi's father believed in education for his daughters just as much as for his sons. So when Higuchi was 14, her father enrolled her in a private school, even though the family could barely make ends meet. There, Higuchi thrived academically. She studied poetry in Japanese literature, made top grades, and won several poetry competitions. Her family's financial situation proved a source of motivation, but it also left her feeling alienated from her wealthy classmates. When Higuchi was 16, her world flipped upside down. Her father died from tuberculosis, and she became the sole supporter of her mother and younger sister. Suddenly, Higuchi found herself in an unusual position, head of the household as an unmarried woman. Her marriage prospects disappeared, and Higuchi was devastated. To cope, she began keeping a diary where she cultivated her own literary voice. When one of her classmates successfully published a book, Higuchi felt she too could try making money through writing fiction. Higuchi published her first story, Flowers at Dusk, when she was 20 years old, under the pen name Ichiyo, or floating leaf. In 1892, she got her first big break. Her story in obscurity was published by a prominent literary magazine. But Higuchi was plagued by perfectionism. She struggled to separate writing for art and writing for money. How could I ever stain my name, which I wish to leave behind for 1,000 years, she once said, for the sake of temporary gain? Higuchi's style of writing and her subject matter evolved as she grew. Her early works involved over-the-top flowery language, but over time, she focused on representing the realities of her own world. She wrote about living in poverty, being betrayed by men, and struggling with the lack of control over one's destiny. Higuchi didn't write to enact social political change. She simply wanted to demonstrate the painful reality of women that didn't end in a fairy tale. Throughout her brief career, the battle between art and money persisted. At one point, Higuchi moved her family to Yoshiwara, a neighborhood known for prostitution to cut down on living costs. With her mother and sister, Higuchi opened a small general store, another feat for a young single woman in the Meiji period. Although the store eventually failed, her time in Yoshiwara was a significant inspiration for her 1895 masterpiece, Takekurabe, about children growing up on the edge of the red light district. Higuchi ultimately wrote 21 short stories, thousands of poems, and a multi-year, multi-part diary. But after only four years of writing, she died from tuberculosis on November 23, 1896. Higuchi was just 24 years old. Her success was a direct result of her fearlessness. She once said, in attempting a venture with all one's heart, discarding worldly desires and being unafraid in all matters of life and death, a woman can achieve as much as a man can. All month, we're highlighting prodigies. For more information, find us on Facebook and Instagram at Wamanaka Podcast. You can order Rising Troublemaker everywhere books are sold. Special thanks to creators Jenny and Liz Kaplan for inviting me to guest host. Talk to you tomorrow.
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