Carmen Blacker

Carmen Blacker
Born (1924-07-13)July 13, 1924
Kensington, London, United Kingdom
Died July 13, 2009(2009-07-13) (aged 85)
Cambridge, United Kingdom
Nationality United Kingdom

Carmen Blacker FBA (13 July 1924 – 13 July 2009) was a British scholar of Japanese language. She was a lecturer in Japanese at Cambridge University.

Life

Blacker was born in Kensington in 1924. Her parents were Carlos Paton Blacker and Helen Maud (born Pilkington). She was interested in Japanese, by the age of 12 she had a Japanese Grammar and in 1942 she attended the School of Oriental and African Studies where she was identified for top secret work. Blacker was recruited by the code breakers at Bletchley Park but she left because she saw no benefit in the work. She was paid two pounds a week because she was a young woman. She met the difficult Orientalist and sinologist Arthur Waley at Bletchley and he inspired her to learn Chinese in her spare time.[1] In 1944 she arranged lessons in Japanese for herself from Major General Pigott.[2]

Blacker became a Fellow of the British Academy.[1] She was awarded the Minakata Kumagusu Prize in 1998.[3]

She married the Chinese scholar Michael Arthur Nathan Loewe in 2002. She had met Loewe at Bletchley Park.[2] Blacker died in a Cambridge nursing home in 2009.[3]

Works

References

  1. 1 2 Carmen Blacker FBA Archived December 8, 2015, at the Wayback Machine.
  2. 1 2 P. F. Kornicki, ‘Blacker, Carmen Elizabeth Deidre (1924–2009)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, Jan 2013; online edn, May 2013 accessed 28 Nov 2015
  3. 1 2 Obituary Carmen Blacker, Japan Times, Retrieved 27 November 2015


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