Haikai Poet Yosa Buson and the Bashō Revival

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BRILL, 2007 - 308 ページ
This book uses the haikai verse and paintings of the brilliant, innovative artist Yosa Buson (1716-1783) as a focal point from which to explore how Japanese writers competed for artistic authority in a time when popular responses to economic, technological, and social changes were creating the beginnings of a modern literature. The first part of the book discusses Buson's role in the Bash? Revival movement, situating his haikai in the context of the social networks that writers of his time both relied on and resisted. The second part explores Buson's "hokku," linked verse, and "haiga" (haikai painting). The book concludes with a discussion of Buson's reception in the modern period, and includes translations of his principal works.
 

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目次

INTRODUCTION
1
CHAPTER ONE BUSON THE BUNJIN LITERATI AND THE BASHŌ REVIVAL
14
ANXIETY AND TRANSCENDENCE
35
HOKKU 17401770
52
HOKKU 17711783
93
LINKED VERSE SEQUENCES
130
CHAPTER SIX BUSON AND HAIGA
165
EPILOGUE
244
APPENDIX
249
BIBLIOGRAPHY
292
CITED BUSON HOKKU
301
INDEX
304
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著者について (2007)

Cheryl A. Crowley, Ph.D. (2001) in Japanese Literature, Columbia University, is Assistant Professor of Japanese Literature at Emory University. She has published on Japanese literature in Monumenta Nipponica, Early Modern Japan Journal, US-Japan Women's Journal, and Japan Studies Review.

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