Wataya Risa (born February 1, 1984, Kyōto, Japan) is a Japanese writer who in 2004 became the youngest-ever recipient of the Akutagawa Prize, Japan’s most prestigious literary award.
Wataya debuted as an author at age 17 with Insutōru (2001; Install; film 2004), for which she won the 2001 Bungei literary prize. The novel depicted a troubled high-school girl’s experience with the erotic world of adults through Internet chat rooms. Wataya went on to attend Waseda University, studying Japanese literature and education. Her second novel, Keritai senaka (roughly, “The Back I Want to Kick”), was released when she was a third-year university student. It vividly portrays the self-consciousness and alienation that a girl in her first year of high school experiences. The teen struggles to relate to her peers and develops a love-hate relationship with a male classmate who is a loner.
In early 2004 Wataya shared the Akutagawa Prize with Hitomi Kanehara; the award was given to Wataya—who, at 19, became the first teenage recipient of the award—for Keritai senaka. The two young women created a media sensation in Japan for their ability to capture the perspectives of a generation coming of age after the bursting of the country’s “bubble economy” of the 1980s. When the literary magazine Bungei shunjū featured both novels in 2004, it sold more than 1.1 million copies, breaking its previous sales record. Nevertheless, the awarding of the Akutagawa Prize to these two young women was the subject of much debate in Japan. Many critics hailed the depictions of troubled youth in a changing social milieu, but others saw the award as an effort to boost sales by selecting attractive young writers who explored shocking themes at a time when the book industry was struggling.