Jōdai was born on July 3, 1886.[1] Her father was the head of Harue village in Shimane Prefecture, Japan.[2][3] After graduating from the Shimane Prefectural Matsue Kita High School, she returned to her village and taught at the local school for a while, but then continued her studies at the Japan Women's University. She graduated with a degree in English literature. Jōdai wanted to continue her studies at the Tokyo Imperial University, but they did not accept female students at that time. Instead, a professor there named Nitobe Inazo got her a place at the Wells College in the United States, after she wrote to him about her desire to study abroad.[4]
After World War II, Jōdai resumed teaching at the Japan Women's University. In 1955 she was one of the founding members of the Committee of Seven to Appeal for World Peace. From 1956 until March 1965, Jōdai served as the president of the Japan Women's University.[5] During her tenure as president she made all of the library's collection open stacks and started a friends of the library group.[7]
Jōdai, Tano (1939). ポエムズ・フォ・ヤング・ピープル [Poems for young people]. 開隆堂書店.
上代たの文集 女性教育者の先達 [The poetry of Jōdai Tano: a pioneer of female educators]. 上代たの文集編集委員会. 1984.
Edited
Jōdai, Tano, ed. (1933). Fifty American poets. 開隆堂書店.
Jōdai, Tano, ed. (1936). フロスト詩選 [Selected poems by Robert Frost]. 開隆堂書店.
Further reading
Shimada, Noriko (2010). 上代タノ : 女子高等教育, 平和運動のパイオニア [Tano Jōdai : a pioneer of women's higher education and the peace movement in Japan]. Tokyo: Domesu Shuppan.