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Japanese literature

Japanese literature throughout most of its history has been influenced by cultural contact with neighboring Asian literatures, most notably China and its literature. Early texts were often written in pure Classical Chinese or lit.'Chinese writing' (漢文, kanbun), a Chinese-Japanese creole language.[1] Indian literature also had an influence through the spread of Buddhism in Japan.

During the Heian period, Japan's original kokufū culture (lit.'national culture') developed and literature also established its own style, with the significant usage and development of kana (仮名) to write Japanese literature.[2]

Following the Perry Expedition which led to the end of the sakoku policy and the forced reopening of foreign trade, Western literature has also made influences to the development of modern Japanese writers, while Japanese literature has in turn become more recognized internationally, leading to two Japanese Nobel laureates in literature, namely Yasunari Kawabata and Kenzaburō Ōe.[a]

History

Nara-period literature (before 794)

Before the introduction of kanji from China to Japan, Japan had no writing system; it is believed that Chinese characters came to Japan at the very beginning of the 5th century, brought by immigrants from Korea and China. Early Japanese texts first followed the Chinese model,[1] before gradually transitioning to a hybrid of Chinese characters used in Japanese syntactical formats, resulting in sentences written with Chinese characters but read phonetically in Japanese.

Chinese characters were also further adapted, creating what is known as man'yōgana, the earliest form of kana, or Japanese syllabic writing.[3] The earliest literary works in Japan were created in the Nara period.[1] These include the Kojiki (712), a historical record that also chronicles ancient Japanese mythology and folk songs; the Nihon Shoki (720), a chronicle written in Chinese that is significantly more detailed than the Kojiki; and the Man'yōshū (759), a poetry anthology. One of the stories they describe is the tale of Urashima Tarō.

Heian literature (794–1185)

 
Murasaki Shikibu, the author of The Tale of Genji.

The Heian period has been referred to as the golden era of art and literature in Japan.[4] During this era, literature became centered on a cultural elite of nobility and monks.[5] The imperial court particularly patronized the poets, most of whom were courtiers or ladies-in-waiting. Reflecting the aristocratic atmosphere, the poetry was elegant and sophisticated and expressed emotions in a rhetorical style. Editing the resulting anthologies of poetry soon became a national pastime. The iroha poem, now one of two standard orderings for the Japanese syllabary, was also developed during the early Heian period.

The Tale of Genji (Genji Monogatari), written in the early 11th century by female courtier Murasaki Shikibu, is considered the pre-eminent novel of Heian fiction.[6] Other important writings of this period include the Kokin Wakashū (905), a waka-poetry anthology, and The Pillow Book (Makura no Sōshi, 990s). The Pillow Book was written by Sei Shōnagon, Murasaki Shikibu's contemporary and rival, as an essay about the life, loves, and pastimes of nobles in the Emperor's court.[7] Another notable piece of fictional Japanese literature was Konjaku Monogatarishū, a collection of over a thousand stories in 31 volumes. The volumes cover various tales from India, China and Japan.

The 10th-century Japanese narrative, The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter (Taketori Monogatari), can be considered an early example of proto-science fiction. The protagonist of the story, Kaguya-hime, is a princess from the Moon who is sent to Earth for safety during a celestial war, and is found and raised by a bamboo cutter. She is later taken back to her extraterrestrial family in an illustrated depiction of a disc-shaped flying object similar to a flying saucer.[8]

Kamakura-Muromachi period literature (1185–1603)

During the Kamakura period (1185–1333), Japan experienced many civil wars which led to the development of a warrior class, and subsequent war tales, histories, and related stories.[9] Work from this period is notable for its more somber tone compared to the works of previous eras, with themes of life and death, simple lifestyles, and redemption through killing.[10] A representative work is The Tale of the Heike (Heike Monogatari, 1371), an epic account of the struggle between the Minamoto and Taira clans for control of Japan at the end of the 12th century. Other important tales of the period include Kamo no Chōmei's Hōjōki (1212) and Yoshida Kenkō's Tsurezuregusa (1331).

Despite a decline in the importance of the imperial court, aristocratic literature remained the center of Japanese culture at the beginning of the Kamakura period. Many literary works were marked by a nostalgia for the Heian period.[11] The Kamakura period also saw a renewed vitality of poetry, with a number of anthologies compiled,[9][12] such as the Shin Kokin Wakashū compiled in the early 1200s. However, there were fewer notable works by female authors during this period, reflecting the lowered status of women.[11]

As the importance of the imperial court continued to decline, a major feature of Muromachi literature (1333–1603) was the spread of cultural activity through all levels of society. Classical court literature, which had been the focal point of Japanese literature up until this point, gradually disappeared.[13][11] New genres such as renga, or linked verse, and Noh theater developed among the common people,[14] and setsuwa such as the Nihon Ryoiki were created by Buddhist priests for preaching.[citation needed] The development of roads, along with a growing public interest in travel and pilgrimages, brought rise to the greater popularity of travel literature from the early 13th to 14th centuries.[15] Notable examples of travel diaries include Fuji kikō (1432) and Tsukushi michi no ki (1480).[16][17]

Edo-period literature (1603–1868)

 

Literature during this time was written during the largely peaceful Tokugawa shogunate (commonly referred to as the Edo period). Due in large part to the rise of the working and middle classes in the new capital of Edo (modern Tokyo), forms of popular drama developed which would later evolve into kabuki. The jōruri and kabuki dramatist Chikamatsu Monzaemon (1653–1725) became popular at the end of the 17th century, and he is also known as Japan's Shakespeare.

Many different genres of literature made their debut during the Edo period, helped by a rising literacy rate among the growing population of townspeople, as well as the development of lending libraries. Ihara Saikaku (1642–1693) might be said to have given birth to the modern consciousness of the novel in Japan, mixing vernacular dialogue into his humorous and cautionary tales of the pleasure quarters, the so-called Ukiyozōshi ("floating world") genre. Ihara's Life of an Amorous Man is considered the first work in this genre. Although Ihara's works were not regarded as high literature at the time because it had been aimed towards and popularized by the chōnin (merchant classes), they became popular and were key to the development and spread of ukiyozōshi.

Matsuo Bashō (1644–1694) is recognized as the greatest master of haiku (then called hokku). His poems were influenced by his firsthand experience of the world around him, often encapsulating the feeling of a scene in a few simple elements. He made his life's work the transformation of haikai into a literary genre. For Bashō, haikai involved a combination of comic playfulness and spiritual depth, ascetic practice, and involvement in human society. In particular, Bashō wrote Oku no Hosomichi, a major work in the form of a travel diary, considered "one of the major texts of classical Japanese literature."[18]

Fukuda Chiyo-ni (1703–1775) is widely regarded as one of the greatest haiku poets. Before her time, haiku by women were often dismissed and ignored. Her dedication toward her career not only paved a way for her career but it also opened a path for other women to follow. Her early poems were influenced by Matsuo Bashō, although she did later develop her own unique style as an independent figure in her own right. While still a teenager, she had already become very popular all over Japan for her poetry. Her poems, although mostly dealing with nature, work for unity of nature with humanity.[19] Her own life was that of the haikai poets who made their lives and the world they lived in one with themselves, living a simple and humble life. She was able to make connections by being observant and carefully studying the unique things around her ordinary world and writing them down.[20]

Rangaku was an intellectual movement situated in Edo and centered on the study of Dutch (and by subsequently western) science and technology, history, philosophy, art, and language, based primarily on the Dutch books imported via Nagasaki. The polymath Hiraga Gennai (1728–1780) was a scholar of rangaku and a writer of popular fiction. Sugita Genpaku (1733–1817) was a Japanese scholar known for his translation of Kaitai Shinsho (New Book of Anatomy) from the Dutch-language anatomy book Ontleedkundige Tafelen. As a full-blown translation from a Western language, it was the first of its kind in Japan. Although there was a minor Western influence trickling into the country from the Dutch settlement at Nagasaki, it was the importation of Chinese vernacular fiction that proved the greatest outside influence on the development of Early Modern Japanese fiction.

Jippensha Ikku (1765–1831) is known as Japan's Mark Twain and wrote Tōkaidōchū Hizakurige, which is a mix of travelogue and comedy. Tsuga Teisho, Takebe Ayatari, and Okajima Kanzan were instrumental in developing the yomihon, which were historical romances almost entirely in prose, influenced by Chinese vernacular novels such as Sangoku-shi (三国志, Three Kingdoms) and Suikoden (水滸伝, Water Margin).

Two yomihon masterpieces were written by Ueda Akinari (1734–1809): Ugetsu Monogatari and Harusame Monogatari. Kyokutei Bakin (1767–1848) wrote the extremely popular fantasy/historical romance Nansō Satomi Hakkenden over a period of twenty-eight years to complete (1814–1842), in addition to other yomihon. Santō Kyōden wrote yomihon mostly set in the red-light districts until the Kansei edicts banned such works, and he turned to comedic kibyōshi. Genres included horror, crime stories, morality stories, comedy, and pornography — often accompanied by colorful woodcut prints.

Hokusai (1760–1849), perhaps Japan's most famous woodblock print artist, also illustrated fiction as well as his famous 36 Views of Mount Fuji.

Nevertheless, in the Tokugawa period, as in earlier periods, scholarly work continued to be published in Chinese, which was the language of the learned much as Latin was in Europe.[21]

Meiji, Taishō, and early Shōwa-period literature (1868–1945)

 
 
Mori Ōgai (left) and Natsume Sōseki (right).

The Meiji period marked the re-opening of Japan to the West, ending over two centuries of national seclusion, and marking the beginning of a period of rapid industrialization. The introduction of European literature brought free verse into the poetic repertoire. It became widely used for longer works embodying new intellectual themes. Young Japanese prose writers and dramatists faced a suddenly-broadened horizon of new ideas and artistic schools, with novelists amongst some of the first to assimilate these concepts successfully into their writing.

Natsume Sōseki's (1867–1916) humorous novel Wagahai wa neko de aru (I Am a Cat, 1905) employed a cat as the narrator, and he also wrote the famous novels Botchan (1906) and Kokoro (1914). Natsume, Mori Ōgai, and Shiga Naoya, who was called "god of the novel" as the most prominent "I novel" writer, were instrumental in adopting and adapting Western literary conventions and techniques. Ryūnosuke Akutagawa is known especially for his historical short stories. Ozaki Kōyō, Kyōka Izumi, and Ichiyo Higuchi represent a strain of writers whose style hearkens back to early-Modern Japanese literature.

In the early Meiji period (1868–1880s), Fukuzawa Yukichi authored Enlightenment literature, while pre-modern popular books depicted the quickly changing country. Realism was brought in by Tsubouchi Shōyō and Futabatei Shimei in the mid-Meiji period (late 1880s–early 1890s) while the Classicism of Ozaki Kōyō, Yamada Bimyo and Kōda Rohan gained popularity. Ichiyō Higuchi, a rare female writer in this era, wrote short stories on powerless women of this age in a simple style in between literary and colloquial. Kyōka Izumi, a favored disciple of Ozaki, pursued a flowing and elegant style and wrote early novels such as The Operating Room (1895) in literary style and later ones including The Holy Man of Mount Koya (1900) in colloquial language.

Romanticism was brought in by Mori Ōgai with his anthology of translated poems (1889) and carried to its height by Tōson Shimazaki, alongside magazines such as Myōjō and Bungaku-kai in the early 1900s. Mori also wrote some modern novels including The Dancing Girl (1890), The Wild Geese (1911), then later wrote historical novels. Natsume Sōseki, who is often compared with Mori Ōgai, wrote I Am a Cat (1905) with humor and satire, then depicted fresh and pure youth in Botchan (1906) and Sanshirō (1908). He eventually pursued transcendence of human emotions and egoism in his later works including Kokoro (1914) and his last and unfinished novel Light and darkness (1916).

Shimazaki shifted from Romanticism to Naturalism which was established with his The Broken Commandment (1906) and Katai Tayama's Futon (1907). Naturalism hatched "I Novel" (Watakushi-shōsetu) that describes the authors themselves and depicts their own mental states. Neo-romanticism came out of anti-naturalism and was led by Kafū Nagai, Jun'ichirō Tanizaki, Kōtarō Takamura, Hakushū Kitahara and others in the early 1910s. Saneatsu Mushanokōji, Naoya Shiga and others founded a magazine Shirakaba in 1910. They shared a common characteristic, Humanism. Shiga's style was autobiographical and depicted states of his mind and sometimes classified as "I Novel" in this sense. Ryūnosuke Akutagawa, who was highly praised by Soseki, wrote short stories including Rashōmon (1915) with an intellectual and analytic attitude and represented Neo-realism in the mid-1910s.

During the 1920s and early 1930s the proletarian literary movement, comprising such writers as Takiji Kobayashi, Denji Kuroshima, Yuriko Miyamoto and Ineko Sata produced a politically radical literature depicting the harsh lives of workers, peasants, women, and other downtrodden members of society, and their struggles for change.

Pre-war Japan saw the debut of several authors best known for the beauty of their language and their tales of love and sensuality, notably Jun'ichirō Tanizaki and Japan's first winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature, Yasunari Kawabata, a master of psychological fiction. Ashihei Hino wrote lyrical bestsellers glorifying the war, while Tatsuzō Ishikawa attempted to publish a disturbingly realistic account of the advance on Nanjing. Writers who opposed the war include Denji Kuroshima, Mitsuharu Kaneko, Hideo Oguma and Jun Ishikawa.

Postwar literature (1945–onwards)

World War II, and Japan's defeat, deeply influenced Japanese literature. Many authors wrote stories of disaffection, loss of purpose, and the coping with defeat. Haruo Umezaki's short story Sakurajima shows a disillusioned and skeptical Navy officer stationed in a base located on the Sakurajima volcanic island, close to Kagoshima, on the southern tip of Kyushu. Osamu Dazai's novel The Setting Sun tells of a soldier returning from Manchukuo. Shōhei Ōoka won the Yomiuri Prize for his novel Fires on the Plain about a Japanese deserter going mad in the Philippine jungle. Yukio Mishima, well known for both his nihilistic writing and his controversial suicide by seppuku, began writing in the post-war period. Nobuo Kojima's short story "The American School" portrays a group of Japanese teachers of English who, in the immediate aftermath of the war, deal with the American occupation in varying ways.

Prominent writers of the 1970s and 1980s were identified with intellectual and moral issues in their attempts to raise social and political consciousness. One of them, Kenzaburō Ōe, who published one of his best-known works, A Personal Matter in 1964, became Japan's second winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature.

Mitsuharu Inoue had long been concerned with the atomic bomb and continued in the 1980s to write on problems of the nuclear age, while Shūsaku Endō depicted the religious dilemma of the Kakure Kirishitan, Roman Catholics in feudal Japan, as a springboard to address spiritual problems. Yasushi Inoue also turned to the past in masterful historical novels of Inner Asia and ancient Japan, in order to portray present human fate.

Avant-garde writers, such as Kōbō Abe, who wrote novels such as The Woman in the Dunes (1960), wanted to express the Japanese experience in modern terms without using either international styles or traditional conventions, developed new inner visions. Yoshikichi Furui related the lives of alienated urban dwellers coping with the minutiae of daily life, while the psychodramas within such daily life crises have been explored by a rising number of important women novelists. The 1988 Naoki Prize went to Shizuko Todo [ja] for Ripening Summer, a story capturing the complex psychology of modern women. Other award-winning stories at the end of the decade dealt with current issues of the elderly in hospitals, the recent past (Pure-Hearted Shopping District in Kōenji, Tokyo), and the life of a Meiji period ukiyo-e artist.

Haruki Murakami is one of the most popular and controversial of today's Japanese authors.[22] His genre-defying, humorous and surreal works have sparked fierce debates in Japan over whether they are true "literature" or simple pop-fiction: Kenzaburō Ōe has been one of his harshest critics. Some of Murakami's best-known works include Norwegian Wood (1987) and The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle (1994–1995).

Banana Yoshimoto, a best-selling contemporary author whose "manga-esque" style of writing sparked much controversy when she debuted in the late 1980s, has come to be recognized as a unique and talented author over the intervening years. Her writing style stresses dialogue over description, resembling the script of a manga, and her works focus on love, friendship, and loss. Her breakout work was 1988's Kitchen.

Although modern Japanese writers covered a wide variety of subjects, one particularly Japanese approach stressed their subjects' inner lives, widening the earlier novel's preoccupation with the narrator's consciousness. In Japanese fiction, plot development and action have often been of secondary interest to emotional issues. In keeping with the general trend toward reaffirming national characteristics, many old themes re-emerged, and some authors turned consciously to the past. Strikingly, Buddhist attitudes about the importance of knowing oneself and the poignant impermanence of things formed an undercurrent to sharp social criticism of this material age. There was a growing emphasis on women's roles, the Japanese persona in the modern world, and the malaise of common people lost in the complexities of urban culture.

Popular fiction, non-fiction, and children's literature all flourished in urban Japan in the 1980s. Many popular works fell between "pure literature" and pulp novels, including all sorts of historical serials, information-packed docudramas, science fiction, mysteries, detective fiction, business stories, war journals, and animal stories. Non-fiction covered everything from crime to politics. Although factual journalism predominated, many of these works were interpretive, reflecting a high degree of individualism. Children's works re-emerged in the 1950s, and the newer entrants into this field, many of the younger women, brought new vitality to it in the 1980s.

Manga (comics) has penetrated almost every sector of the popular market. It includes virtually every field of human interest, such as multivolume high-school histories of Japan and, additionally for the adult market, a manga introduction to economics, and pornography (hentai). Manga represented between 20 and 30 percent of annual publications at the end of the 1980s, in sales of some ¥400 billion per year. Additionally there are light novels which often have illustrations. Many manga are fan-made (dōjinshi).

Cell phone novels appeared in the early 21st century. Written by and for cell phone users, the novels — typically romances read by young women — have become very popular both online and in print. Some, such as Love Sky, have sold millions of print copies, and at the end of 2007 cell phone novels comprised four of the top five fiction best sellers.[23]

Female authors

Female writers in Japan enjoyed a brief period of success during the Heian period, but were undermined following the decline in power of the Imperial Court in the 14th century. Later, in the Meiji era, earlier works written by women such as Murasaki Shikibu and Sei Shonagon were championed amongst the earliest examples of the Japanese literary language, even at a time when the authors themselves experienced challenges due to their gender. One Meiji-period writer, Shimizu Shikin, sought to encourage positive comparisons between her contemporaries and their female forebears in the hopes that female authors would be viewed with respect by society, despite assuming a public role outside the traditional confines of a woman's role in her home (see Good Wife, Wise Mother). Other notable authors of the Meiji period included Hiratsuka Raicho, Higuchi Ichiyo, Tamura Toshiko, Nogami Yaeko and Yosano Akiko.[24]

Significant authors and works

Nara-period literature

Heian-period literature

Kamakura-Muromachi-period literature

Edo-period literature

Meiji- and Taisho-period literature

Modern literature

Awards and contests

Japan has some literary contests and awards in which authors can participate and be awarded.

The Akutagawa Prize is one of the most prestigious literary awards, and receives wide attention from media.

Notes

  1. ^ Kazuo Ishiguro, although an ethnic Japanese born in Japan, became a British citizen in 1983. Consequently, he lost his Japanese citizenship, as Japan does not permit dual citizenships. He won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2017.

References

  1. ^ a b c Seeley, Christopher (1991). A History of Writing in Japan. BRILL. ISBN 9004090819.
  2. ^ Nihonshi jiten.com
  3. ^ Malmkjær, Kirsten (2002). The Linguistics Encyclopedia. Psychology Press. ISBN 978-0-41522210-5.
  4. ^ Walter., Meyer, Milton (1997). Asia : a concise history. Lanham, Md.: Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 127. ISBN 9780847680634. OCLC 44954459.
  5. ^ Kato, Shuichi; Sanderson, Don (2013). A History of Japanese Literature: From the Manyoshu to Modern Times. Routledge. ISBN 9781136613685.
  6. ^ Meissner, Daniel. "web page template". academic.mu.edu. Retrieved 2018-02-17.
  7. ^ Waley, Arthur (2011). The Pillow Book of Sei Shonagon: The Diary of a Courtesan in Tenth Century Japan. Tuttle Publishing. ISBN 9781462900886.
  8. ^ Richardson, Matthew (2001), The Halstead Treasury of Ancient Science Fiction, Rushcutters Bay, New South Wales: Halstead Press, ISBN 1-875684-64-6 (cf. "Once Upon a Time", Emerald City (85), September 2002, retrieved 2008-09-17)
  9. ^ a b Colcutt, Martin (2003). "Japan's Medieval Age: The Kamakura & Muromachi Periods".
  10. ^ Miner, Earl Roy; Odagiri, Hiroko; Morrell, Robert E. (1988). The Princeton Companion to Classical Japanese Literature. Princeton University Press. p. 44. ISBN 0691008256.
  11. ^ a b c Boscaro, Adriana; Gatti, Franco; Raveri, Massimo (2014). Rethinking Japan Vol 1.: Literature, Visual Arts & Linguistics. Routledge. p. 143. ISBN 9781135880538.
  12. ^ Miner, Earl Roy; Odagiri, Hiroko; Morrell, Robert E. (1988). The Princeton Companion to Classical Japanese Literature. Princeton University Press. p. 46. ISBN 0691008256.
  13. ^ Shirane, Haruo (2012). Traditional Japanese Literature: An Anthology, Beginnings to 1600. Columbia University Press. p. 413. ISBN 9780231157308.
  14. ^ Shirane, Haruo (2012). Traditional Japanese Literature: An Anthology, Beginnings to 1600. Columbia University Press. pp. 382, 410. ISBN 9780231157308.
  15. ^ Shirane, Haruo (2012). Traditional Japanese Literature: An Anthology, Beginnings to 1600. Columbia University Press. pp. 382, 413. ISBN 9780231157308.
  16. ^ Katō, Eileen (1979). "Pilgrimage to Daizafu: Sōgi's Tsukushi no Michi no Ki". Monumenta Nipponica. 34 (3): 333–367. doi:10.2307/2384203. JSTOR 2384203.
  17. ^ Plutschow, Herbert Eugen (1989). "Japanese Travel Diaries of the Middle Ages". Oriens Extremus. 29 (1–2): 1–136.
  18. ^ Bashō 1996b: 7.
  19. ^ Patricia Donegan and Yoshie Ishibashi. Chiyo-ni: Woman Haiku Master, Tuttle, 1996. ISBN 0-8048-2053-8 p256
  20. ^ trans. Donegan and Ishibashi, 1996 p172
  21. ^ Earl, David Margery, Emperor, and Nation in Japan; Political Thinkers of the Tokugawa Period, University of Washington Press, Seattle, 1964, p 12
  22. ^ "The Cool, Cynical Voice of Young Japan : In Haruki Murakami's Fiction, There Are No Kimonos, No Bonsai Trees, Just a Disdain for Japanese Tradition and an Obsession With American Pop Culture - Los Angeles Times". Los Angeles Times.
  23. ^ Goodyear, Dana (2008-12-22). "I ♥ Novels". The New Yorker. Retrieved 2010-12-06.
  24. ^ The Modern Murasaki, Columbia University Press, pages x-2

Bibliography

  • Aston, William George. A History of Japanese Literature, William Heinemann, 1899.
  • Birnbaum, A., (ed.). Monkey Brain Sushi: New Tastes in Japanese Fiction. Kodansha International (JPN).
  • Carol Fairbanks. Japanese Women Fiction Writers, Scarecrow Press, 2002. ISBN 0-8108-4086-3
  • Donald Keene
    • Modern Japanese Literature, Grove Press, 1956. ISBN 0-394-17254-X
    • World Within Walls: Japanese Literature of The Pre-Modern Era 1600–1867, Columbia University Press. 1976, reprinted 1999 ISBN 0-231-11467-2
    • Dawn to the West: Japanese Literature in the Modern Era, Poetry, Drama, Criticism, Columbia University Press. 1984, reprinted 1998 ISBN 0-231-11435-4
    • Travellers of a Hundred Ages: The Japanese as Revealed Through 1,000 Years of Diaries, Columbia University Press. 1989, reprinted 1999 ISBN 0-231-11437-0
    • Seeds in the Heart: Japanese Literature from the Earliest Times to the Late Sixteenth Century, Columbia University Press. 1993, reprinted 1999 ISBN 0-231-11441-9
  • McCullough, Helen Craig, Classical Japanese prose: an anthology, Stanford, Calif. : Stanford University Press, 1990, ISBN 0-8047-1628-5
  • Miner, Earl Roy, Odagiri, Hiroko, and Morrell, Robert E., The Princeton companion to classical Japanese literature, Princeton, N.J. : Princeton University Press, 1985. ISBN 0-691-06599-3
  • Ema Tsutomu, Taniyama Shigeru, Ino Kenji, Shinshū Kokugo Sōran (新修国語総覧) Kyoto Shobō. 1977, revised 1981, reprinted 1982

Further reading

  • Aston, William George. A history of Japanese literature, NY, 1899 online
  • Karatani, Kōjin. Origins of modern Japanese literature, Duke University Press, 1993.
  • Katō, Shūichi. A History of Japanese Literature: The first thousand years. Vol. 1., Tokyo; New York: Kodansha International, 1979.
  • Keene, Donald. Japanese literature: An introduction for Western readers, 1953.
  • Konishi, Jin'ichi. A History of Japanese Literature, Volume 3: The High Middle Ages, Princeton University Press, 2014.
  • Shirna Haruo, Suzuki Tomi, Lurie, David (eds.), The Cambridge History of Japanese Literature, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2016.

Primary sources

  • Keene, Donald. Anthology of Japanese Literature: From the Earliest Era to the Mid-Nineteenth Century, Grove/Atlantic, Inc., 2007.

Online text libraries

  • , University of Virginia Library Electronic Text Center
  • Premodern Japanese Texts and Translations, Michael Watson, Meiji Gakuin University

See also

External links

  • Japanese Literature Publishing Project, the Agency for Cultural Affairs of Japan
  • Japanese Book News Website, the Japan Foundation
  • Electronic texts of pre-modern Japanese literature by Satoko Shimazaki
  • for fiction and nonfiction.

japanese, literature, throughout, most, history, been, influenced, cultural, contact, with, neighboring, asian, literatures, most, notably, china, literature, early, texts, were, often, written, pure, classical, chinese, chinese, writing, 漢文, kanbun, chinese, . Japanese literature throughout most of its history has been influenced by cultural contact with neighboring Asian literatures most notably China and its literature Early texts were often written in pure Classical Chinese or lit Chinese writing 漢文 kanbun a Chinese Japanese creole language 1 Indian literature also had an influence through the spread of Buddhism in Japan During the Heian period Japan s original kokufu culture lit national culture developed and literature also established its own style with the significant usage and development of kana 仮名 to write Japanese literature 2 Following the Perry Expedition which led to the end of the sakoku policy and the forced reopening of foreign trade Western literature has also made influences to the development of modern Japanese writers while Japanese literature has in turn become more recognized internationally leading to two Japanese Nobel laureates in literature namely Yasunari Kawabata and Kenzaburō Ōe a Contents 1 History 1 1 Nara period literature before 794 1 2 Heian literature 794 1185 1 3 Kamakura Muromachi period literature 1185 1603 1 4 Edo period literature 1603 1868 1 5 Meiji Taishō and early Shōwa period literature 1868 1945 1 6 Postwar literature 1945 onwards 2 Female authors 3 Significant authors and works 3 1 Nara period literature 3 2 Heian period literature 3 3 Kamakura Muromachi period literature 3 4 Edo period literature 3 5 Meiji and Taisho period literature 3 6 Modern literature 4 Awards and contests 5 Notes 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 Further reading 8 1 Primary sources 8 2 Online text libraries 9 See also 10 External linksHistory EditNara period literature before 794 Edit Before the introduction of kanji from China to Japan Japan had no writing system it is believed that Chinese characters came to Japan at the very beginning of the 5th century brought by immigrants from Korea and China Early Japanese texts first followed the Chinese model 1 before gradually transitioning to a hybrid of Chinese characters used in Japanese syntactical formats resulting in sentences written with Chinese characters but read phonetically in Japanese Chinese characters were also further adapted creating what is known as man yōgana the earliest form of kana or Japanese syllabic writing 3 The earliest literary works in Japan were created in the Nara period 1 These include the Kojiki 712 a historical record that also chronicles ancient Japanese mythology and folk songs the Nihon Shoki 720 a chronicle written in Chinese that is significantly more detailed than the Kojiki and the Man yōshu 759 a poetry anthology One of the stories they describe is the tale of Urashima Tarō Heian literature 794 1185 Edit Main article Heian literature Murasaki Shikibu the author of The Tale of Genji The Heian period has been referred to as the golden era of art and literature in Japan 4 During this era literature became centered on a cultural elite of nobility and monks 5 The imperial court particularly patronized the poets most of whom were courtiers or ladies in waiting Reflecting the aristocratic atmosphere the poetry was elegant and sophisticated and expressed emotions in a rhetorical style Editing the resulting anthologies of poetry soon became a national pastime The iroha poem now one of two standard orderings for the Japanese syllabary was also developed during the early Heian period The Tale of Genji Genji Monogatari written in the early 11th century by female courtier Murasaki Shikibu is considered the pre eminent novel of Heian fiction 6 Other important writings of this period include the Kokin Wakashu 905 a waka poetry anthology and The Pillow Book Makura no Sōshi 990s The Pillow Book was written by Sei Shōnagon Murasaki Shikibu s contemporary and rival as an essay about the life loves and pastimes of nobles in the Emperor s court 7 Another notable piece of fictional Japanese literature was Konjaku Monogatarishu a collection of over a thousand stories in 31 volumes The volumes cover various tales from India China and Japan The 10th century Japanese narrative The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter Taketori Monogatari can be considered an early example of proto science fiction The protagonist of the story Kaguya hime is a princess from the Moon who is sent to Earth for safety during a celestial war and is found and raised by a bamboo cutter She is later taken back to her extraterrestrial family in an illustrated depiction of a disc shaped flying object similar to a flying saucer 8 Kamakura Muromachi period literature 1185 1603 Edit Main article Medieval Japanese literature During the Kamakura period 1185 1333 Japan experienced many civil wars which led to the development of a warrior class and subsequent war tales histories and related stories 9 Work from this period is notable for its more somber tone compared to the works of previous eras with themes of life and death simple lifestyles and redemption through killing 10 A representative work is The Tale of the Heike Heike Monogatari 1371 an epic account of the struggle between the Minamoto and Taira clans for control of Japan at the end of the 12th century Other important tales of the period include Kamo no Chōmei s Hōjōki 1212 and Yoshida Kenkō s Tsurezuregusa 1331 Despite a decline in the importance of the imperial court aristocratic literature remained the center of Japanese culture at the beginning of the Kamakura period Many literary works were marked by a nostalgia for the Heian period 11 The Kamakura period also saw a renewed vitality of poetry with a number of anthologies compiled 9 12 such as the Shin Kokin Wakashu compiled in the early 1200s However there were fewer notable works by female authors during this period reflecting the lowered status of women 11 As the importance of the imperial court continued to decline a major feature of Muromachi literature 1333 1603 was the spread of cultural activity through all levels of society Classical court literature which had been the focal point of Japanese literature up until this point gradually disappeared 13 11 New genres such as renga or linked verse and Noh theater developed among the common people 14 and setsuwa such as the Nihon Ryoiki were created by Buddhist priests for preaching citation needed The development of roads along with a growing public interest in travel and pilgrimages brought rise to the greater popularity of travel literature from the early 13th to 14th centuries 15 Notable examples of travel diaries include Fuji kikō 1432 and Tsukushi michi no ki 1480 16 17 Edo period literature 1603 1868 Edit Matsuo Bashō a haikai poet Literature during this time was written during the largely peaceful Tokugawa shogunate commonly referred to as the Edo period Due in large part to the rise of the working and middle classes in the new capital of Edo modern Tokyo forms of popular drama developed which would later evolve into kabuki The jōruri and kabuki dramatist Chikamatsu Monzaemon 1653 1725 became popular at the end of the 17th century and he is also known as Japan s Shakespeare Many different genres of literature made their debut during the Edo period helped by a rising literacy rate among the growing population of townspeople as well as the development of lending libraries Ihara Saikaku 1642 1693 might be said to have given birth to the modern consciousness of the novel in Japan mixing vernacular dialogue into his humorous and cautionary tales of the pleasure quarters the so called Ukiyozōshi floating world genre Ihara s Life of an Amorous Man is considered the first work in this genre Although Ihara s works were not regarded as high literature at the time because it had been aimed towards and popularized by the chōnin merchant classes they became popular and were key to the development and spread of ukiyozōshi Matsuo Bashō 1644 1694 is recognized as the greatest master of haiku then called hokku His poems were influenced by his firsthand experience of the world around him often encapsulating the feeling of a scene in a few simple elements He made his life s work the transformation of haikai into a literary genre For Bashō haikai involved a combination of comic playfulness and spiritual depth ascetic practice and involvement in human society In particular Bashō wrote Oku no Hosomichi a major work in the form of a travel diary considered one of the major texts of classical Japanese literature 18 Fukuda Chiyo ni 1703 1775 is widely regarded as one of the greatest haiku poets Before her time haiku by women were often dismissed and ignored Her dedication toward her career not only paved a way for her career but it also opened a path for other women to follow Her early poems were influenced by Matsuo Bashō although she did later develop her own unique style as an independent figure in her own right While still a teenager she had already become very popular all over Japan for her poetry Her poems although mostly dealing with nature work for unity of nature with humanity 19 Her own life was that of the haikai poets who made their lives and the world they lived in one with themselves living a simple and humble life She was able to make connections by being observant and carefully studying the unique things around her ordinary world and writing them down 20 Rangaku was an intellectual movement situated in Edo and centered on the study of Dutch and by subsequently western science and technology history philosophy art and language based primarily on the Dutch books imported via Nagasaki The polymath Hiraga Gennai 1728 1780 was a scholar of rangaku and a writer of popular fiction Sugita Genpaku 1733 1817 was a Japanese scholar known for his translation of Kaitai Shinsho New Book of Anatomy from the Dutch language anatomy book Ontleedkundige Tafelen As a full blown translation from a Western language it was the first of its kind in Japan Although there was a minor Western influence trickling into the country from the Dutch settlement at Nagasaki it was the importation of Chinese vernacular fiction that proved the greatest outside influence on the development of Early Modern Japanese fiction Jippensha Ikku 1765 1831 is known as Japan s Mark Twain and wrote Tōkaidōchu Hizakurige which is a mix of travelogue and comedy Tsuga Teisho Takebe Ayatari and Okajima Kanzan were instrumental in developing the yomihon which were historical romances almost entirely in prose influenced by Chinese vernacular novels such as Sangoku shi 三国志 Three Kingdoms and Suikoden 水滸伝 Water Margin Two yomihon masterpieces were written by Ueda Akinari 1734 1809 Ugetsu Monogatari and Harusame Monogatari Kyokutei Bakin 1767 1848 wrote the extremely popular fantasy historical romance Nansō Satomi Hakkenden over a period of twenty eight years to complete 1814 1842 in addition to other yomihon Santō Kyōden wrote yomihon mostly set in the red light districts until the Kansei edicts banned such works and he turned to comedic kibyōshi Genres included horror crime stories morality stories comedy and pornography often accompanied by colorful woodcut prints Hokusai 1760 1849 perhaps Japan s most famous woodblock print artist also illustrated fiction as well as his famous 36 Views of Mount Fuji Nevertheless in the Tokugawa period as in earlier periods scholarly work continued to be published in Chinese which was the language of the learned much as Latin was in Europe 21 Meiji Taishō and early Shōwa period literature 1868 1945 Edit Mori Ōgai left and Natsume Sōseki right The Meiji period marked the re opening of Japan to the West ending over two centuries of national seclusion and marking the beginning of a period of rapid industrialization The introduction of European literature brought free verse into the poetic repertoire It became widely used for longer works embodying new intellectual themes Young Japanese prose writers and dramatists faced a suddenly broadened horizon of new ideas and artistic schools with novelists amongst some of the first to assimilate these concepts successfully into their writing Natsume Sōseki s 1867 1916 humorous novel Wagahai wa neko de aru I Am a Cat 1905 employed a cat as the narrator and he also wrote the famous novels Botchan 1906 and Kokoro 1914 Natsume Mori Ōgai and Shiga Naoya who was called god of the novel as the most prominent I novel writer were instrumental in adopting and adapting Western literary conventions and techniques Ryunosuke Akutagawa is known especially for his historical short stories Ozaki Kōyō Kyōka Izumi and Ichiyo Higuchi represent a strain of writers whose style hearkens back to early Modern Japanese literature In the early Meiji period 1868 1880s Fukuzawa Yukichi authored Enlightenment literature while pre modern popular books depicted the quickly changing country Realism was brought in by Tsubouchi Shōyō and Futabatei Shimei in the mid Meiji period late 1880s early 1890s while the Classicism of Ozaki Kōyō Yamada Bimyo and Kōda Rohan gained popularity Ichiyō Higuchi a rare female writer in this era wrote short stories on powerless women of this age in a simple style in between literary and colloquial Kyōka Izumi a favored disciple of Ozaki pursued a flowing and elegant style and wrote early novels such as The Operating Room 1895 in literary style and later ones including The Holy Man of Mount Koya 1900 in colloquial language Romanticism was brought in by Mori Ōgai with his anthology of translated poems 1889 and carried to its height by Tōson Shimazaki alongside magazines such as Myōjō and Bungaku kai in the early 1900s Mori also wrote some modern novels including The Dancing Girl 1890 The Wild Geese 1911 then later wrote historical novels Natsume Sōseki who is often compared with Mori Ōgai wrote I Am a Cat 1905 with humor and satire then depicted fresh and pure youth in Botchan 1906 and Sanshirō 1908 He eventually pursued transcendence of human emotions and egoism in his later works including Kokoro 1914 and his last and unfinished novel Light and darkness 1916 Shimazaki shifted from Romanticism to Naturalism which was established with his The Broken Commandment 1906 and Katai Tayama s Futon 1907 Naturalism hatched I Novel Watakushi shōsetu that describes the authors themselves and depicts their own mental states Neo romanticism came out of anti naturalism and was led by Kafu Nagai Jun ichirō Tanizaki Kōtarō Takamura Hakushu Kitahara and others in the early 1910s Saneatsu Mushanokōji Naoya Shiga and others founded a magazine Shirakaba in 1910 They shared a common characteristic Humanism Shiga s style was autobiographical and depicted states of his mind and sometimes classified as I Novel in this sense Ryunosuke Akutagawa who was highly praised by Soseki wrote short stories including Rashōmon 1915 with an intellectual and analytic attitude and represented Neo realism in the mid 1910s During the 1920s and early 1930s the proletarian literary movement comprising such writers as Takiji Kobayashi Denji Kuroshima Yuriko Miyamoto and Ineko Sata produced a politically radical literature depicting the harsh lives of workers peasants women and other downtrodden members of society and their struggles for change Pre war Japan saw the debut of several authors best known for the beauty of their language and their tales of love and sensuality notably Jun ichirō Tanizaki and Japan s first winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature Yasunari Kawabata a master of psychological fiction Ashihei Hino wrote lyrical bestsellers glorifying the war while Tatsuzō Ishikawa attempted to publish a disturbingly realistic account of the advance on Nanjing Writers who opposed the war include Denji Kuroshima Mitsuharu Kaneko Hideo Oguma and Jun Ishikawa Postwar literature 1945 onwards Edit World War II and Japan s defeat deeply influenced Japanese literature Many authors wrote stories of disaffection loss of purpose and the coping with defeat Haruo Umezaki s short story Sakurajima shows a disillusioned and skeptical Navy officer stationed in a base located on the Sakurajima volcanic island close to Kagoshima on the southern tip of Kyushu Osamu Dazai s novel The Setting Sun tells of a soldier returning from Manchukuo Shōhei Ōoka won the Yomiuri Prize for his novel Fires on the Plain about a Japanese deserter going mad in the Philippine jungle Yukio Mishima well known for both his nihilistic writing and his controversial suicide by seppuku began writing in the post war period Nobuo Kojima s short story The American School portrays a group of Japanese teachers of English who in the immediate aftermath of the war deal with the American occupation in varying ways Prominent writers of the 1970s and 1980s were identified with intellectual and moral issues in their attempts to raise social and political consciousness One of them Kenzaburō Ōe who published one of his best known works A Personal Matter in 1964 became Japan s second winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature Mitsuharu Inoue had long been concerned with the atomic bomb and continued in the 1980s to write on problems of the nuclear age while Shusaku Endō depicted the religious dilemma of the Kakure Kirishitan Roman Catholics in feudal Japan as a springboard to address spiritual problems Yasushi Inoue also turned to the past in masterful historical novels of Inner Asia and ancient Japan in order to portray present human fate Avant garde writers such as Kōbō Abe who wrote novels such as The Woman in the Dunes 1960 wanted to express the Japanese experience in modern terms without using either international styles or traditional conventions developed new inner visions Yoshikichi Furui related the lives of alienated urban dwellers coping with the minutiae of daily life while the psychodramas within such daily life crises have been explored by a rising number of important women novelists The 1988 Naoki Prize went to Shizuko Todo ja for Ripening Summer a story capturing the complex psychology of modern women Other award winning stories at the end of the decade dealt with current issues of the elderly in hospitals the recent past Pure Hearted Shopping District in Kōenji Tokyo and the life of a Meiji period ukiyo e artist Haruki Murakami is one of the most popular and controversial of today s Japanese authors 22 His genre defying humorous and surreal works have sparked fierce debates in Japan over whether they are true literature or simple pop fiction Kenzaburō Ōe has been one of his harshest critics Some of Murakami s best known works include Norwegian Wood 1987 and The Wind Up Bird Chronicle 1994 1995 Banana Yoshimoto a best selling contemporary author whose manga esque style of writing sparked much controversy when she debuted in the late 1980s has come to be recognized as a unique and talented author over the intervening years Her writing style stresses dialogue over description resembling the script of a manga and her works focus on love friendship and loss Her breakout work was 1988 s Kitchen Although modern Japanese writers covered a wide variety of subjects one particularly Japanese approach stressed their subjects inner lives widening the earlier novel s preoccupation with the narrator s consciousness In Japanese fiction plot development and action have often been of secondary interest to emotional issues In keeping with the general trend toward reaffirming national characteristics many old themes re emerged and some authors turned consciously to the past Strikingly Buddhist attitudes about the importance of knowing oneself and the poignant impermanence of things formed an undercurrent to sharp social criticism of this material age There was a growing emphasis on women s roles the Japanese persona in the modern world and the malaise of common people lost in the complexities of urban culture Popular fiction non fiction and children s literature all flourished in urban Japan in the 1980s Many popular works fell between pure literature and pulp novels including all sorts of historical serials information packed docudramas science fiction mysteries detective fiction business stories war journals and animal stories Non fiction covered everything from crime to politics Although factual journalism predominated many of these works were interpretive reflecting a high degree of individualism Children s works re emerged in the 1950s and the newer entrants into this field many of the younger women brought new vitality to it in the 1980s Manga comics has penetrated almost every sector of the popular market It includes virtually every field of human interest such as multivolume high school histories of Japan and additionally for the adult market a manga introduction to economics and pornography hentai Manga represented between 20 and 30 percent of annual publications at the end of the 1980s in sales of some 400 billion per year Additionally there are light novels which often have illustrations Many manga are fan made dōjinshi Cell phone novels appeared in the early 21st century Written by and for cell phone users the novels typically romances read by young women have become very popular both online and in print Some such as Love Sky have sold millions of print copies and at the end of 2007 cell phone novels comprised four of the top five fiction best sellers 23 Female authors EditFemale writers in Japan enjoyed a brief period of success during the Heian period but were undermined following the decline in power of the Imperial Court in the 14th century Later in the Meiji era earlier works written by women such as Murasaki Shikibu and Sei Shonagon were championed amongst the earliest examples of the Japanese literary language even at a time when the authors themselves experienced challenges due to their gender One Meiji period writer Shimizu Shikin sought to encourage positive comparisons between her contemporaries and their female forebears in the hopes that female authors would be viewed with respect by society despite assuming a public role outside the traditional confines of a woman s role in her home see Good Wife Wise Mother Other notable authors of the Meiji period included Hiratsuka Raicho Higuchi Ichiyo Tamura Toshiko Nogami Yaeko and Yosano Akiko 24 Significant authors and works EditMain article List of Japanese authors Nara period literature Edit Kakinomoto no Hitomaro c 660 c 720 authored numerous chōka and tanka in the Man yōshu Ōtomo no Yakamochi c 718 785 possible compiler of the Man yōshuHeian period literature Edit Ariwara no Narihira 825 880 Ono no Komachi c 825 c 900 Sugawara no Michizane 845 903 Ki no Tsurayuki 872 945 Lady Ise c 875 c 938 Minamoto no Shitagō 911 983 Michitsuna no Haha c 935 c 995 author of Kagerō Nikki Akazome Emon c 956 c 1041 Sei Shōnagon c 966 c 1017 The Pillow Book Murasaki Shikibu c 973 c 1025 The Tale of Genji Izumi Shikibu c 976 c 1027 Lady Sarashina c 1008 c 1059 author of Sarashina Nikki Saigyō Hōshi 1118 1190 Kamakura Muromachi period literature Edit The Tale of the Heike c 1212 1309 Ogura Hyakunin Isshu c 1235 Fujiwara no Teika 1162 1241 Yoshida Kenkō c 1283 1352 TsurezuregusaEdo period literature Edit Miyamoto Musashi c 1584 1645 The Book of Five Rings Ihara Saikaku 1642 1693 Matsuo Bashō 1644 1694 Chikamatsu Monzaemon 1653 1725 Yamamoto Tsunetomo 1659 1719 Yokoi Yayu 1702 1783 Fukuda Chiyo ni 1703 1775 Yosa Buson 1716 1784 Motoori Norinaga 1730 1801 Sugita Genpaku 1733 1817 Ueda Akinari 1734 1809 Santō Kyōden 1761 1816 Kobayashi Issa 1763 1828 Jippensha Ikku 1765 1831 Kyokutei Bakin 1767 1848 Edo Meisho Zue travelogue 1834 Hokuetsu Seppu work of human geography 1837 Meiji and Taisho period literature Edit Nakane Kōtei 1839 1913 Lafcadio Hearn 1850 1904 Mori Ōgai 1862 1922 Futabatei Shimei 1864 1909 Itō Sachio 1864 1913 Natsume Sōseki 1867 1916 Kōda Rohan 1867 1947 Masaoka Shiki 1867 1902 Ozaki Kōyō 1868 1903 Doppo Kunikida 1871 1908 Ichiyō Higuchi 1872 1896 Tōson Shimazaki 1872 1943 Kyōka Izumi 1873 1939 Yonejiro Noguchi 1875 1947 Takeo Arishima 1878 1923 Akiko Yosano 1878 1942 Kafu Nagai 1879 1959 Naoya Shiga 1883 1971 Takuboku Ishikawa 1886 1912 Kan Kikuchi 1888 1948 Ryunosuke Akutagawa 1892 1927 Kenji Miyazawa 1896 1933 Denji Kuroshima 1898 1943 Motojirō Kajii 1901 1932 Hideo Oguma 1901 1940 Takiji Kobayashi 1903 1933 Modern literature Edit Kansuke Naka 1885 1965 Yaeko Nogami 1885 1985 Jun ichirō Tanizaki 1886 1965 Hyakken Uchida 1889 1971 Edogawa Ranpo 1894 1965 Eiji Yoshikawa 1892 1962 Mitsuharu Kaneko 1895 1975 Juza Unno 1897 1949 Shigeji Tsuboi 1897 1975 Chiyo Uno 1897 1996 Masuji Ibuse 1898 1993 Jun Ishikawa 1899 1987 Yasunari Kawabata 1899 1972 Yuriko Miyamoto 1899 1951 Sakae Tsuboi 1899 1967 Fumiko Hayashi 1903 1951 Tamiki Hara 1905 1951 Tatsuzō Ishikawa 1905 1985 Fumiko Enchi 1905 1986 Ango Sakaguchi 1906 1955 Osamu Dazai 1909 1948 Shōhei Ōoka 1909 1988 Sakunosuke Oda 1913 1947 Haruo Umezaki 1915 1965 Ayako Miura 1922 1999 Shusaku Endō 1923 1996 Ryōtarō Shiba 1923 1996 Kōbō Abe 1924 1993 Toyoko Yamasaki 1924 2013 Yukio Mishima 1925 1970 Osamu Tezuka 1928 1989 Akiyuki Nosaka 1930 2015 Sawako Ariyoshi 1931 1984 Ayako Sono b 1931 Hisashi Inoue 1933 2010 Kenzaburō Ōe b 1935 Michiko Yamamoto b 1936 Kenji Nakagami 1946 1992 Haruki Murakami b 1949 Natsuo Kirino b 1951 Ryu Murakami b 1952 Yōko Ogawa b 1962 Banana Yoshimoto b 1964 Mieko Kawakami b 1976 Sayaka Murata b 1979 Awards and contests EditMain article List of literary awards Japanese literature Japan has some literary contests and awards in which authors can participate and be awarded The Akutagawa Prize is one of the most prestigious literary awards and receives wide attention from media Notes Edit Kazuo Ishiguro although an ethnic Japanese born in Japan became a British citizen in 1983 Consequently he lost his Japanese citizenship as Japan does not permit dual citizenships He won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2017 References Edit a b c Seeley Christopher 1991 A History of Writing in Japan BRILL ISBN 9004090819 kokuhu bunka Nihonshi jiten com Malmkjaer Kirsten 2002 The Linguistics Encyclopedia Psychology Press ISBN 978 0 41522210 5 Walter Meyer Milton 1997 Asia a concise history Lanham Md Rowman amp Littlefield pp 127 ISBN 9780847680634 OCLC 44954459 Kato Shuichi Sanderson Don 2013 A History of Japanese Literature From the Manyoshu to Modern Times Routledge ISBN 9781136613685 Meissner Daniel web page template academic mu edu Retrieved 2018 02 17 Waley Arthur 2011 The Pillow Book of Sei Shonagon The Diary of a Courtesan in Tenth Century Japan Tuttle Publishing ISBN 9781462900886 Richardson Matthew 2001 The Halstead Treasury of Ancient Science Fiction Rushcutters Bay New South Wales Halstead Press ISBN 1 875684 64 6 cf Once Upon a Time Emerald City 85 September 2002 retrieved 2008 09 17 a b Colcutt Martin 2003 Japan s Medieval Age The Kamakura amp Muromachi Periods Miner Earl Roy Odagiri Hiroko Morrell Robert E 1988 The Princeton Companion to Classical Japanese Literature Princeton University Press p 44 ISBN 0691008256 a b c Boscaro Adriana Gatti Franco Raveri Massimo 2014 Rethinking Japan Vol 1 Literature Visual Arts amp Linguistics Routledge p 143 ISBN 9781135880538 Miner Earl Roy Odagiri Hiroko Morrell Robert E 1988 The Princeton Companion to Classical Japanese Literature Princeton University Press p 46 ISBN 0691008256 Shirane Haruo 2012 Traditional Japanese Literature An Anthology Beginnings to 1600 Columbia University Press p 413 ISBN 9780231157308 Shirane Haruo 2012 Traditional Japanese Literature An Anthology Beginnings to 1600 Columbia University Press pp 382 410 ISBN 9780231157308 Shirane Haruo 2012 Traditional Japanese Literature An Anthology Beginnings to 1600 Columbia University Press pp 382 413 ISBN 9780231157308 Katō Eileen 1979 Pilgrimage to Daizafu Sōgi s Tsukushi no Michi no Ki Monumenta Nipponica 34 3 333 367 doi 10 2307 2384203 JSTOR 2384203 Plutschow Herbert Eugen 1989 Japanese Travel Diaries of the Middle Ages Oriens Extremus 29 1 2 1 136 Bashō 1996b 7 Patricia Donegan and Yoshie Ishibashi Chiyo ni Woman Haiku Master Tuttle 1996 ISBN 0 8048 2053 8 p256 trans Donegan and Ishibashi 1996 p172 Earl David Margery Emperor and Nation in Japan Political Thinkers of the Tokugawa Period University of Washington Press Seattle 1964 p 12 The Cool Cynical Voice of Young Japan In Haruki Murakami s Fiction There Are No Kimonos No Bonsai Trees Just a Disdain for Japanese Tradition and an Obsession With American Pop Culture Los Angeles Times Los Angeles Times Goodyear Dana 2008 12 22 I Novels The New Yorker Retrieved 2010 12 06 The Modern Murasaki Columbia University Press pages x 2Bibliography EditAston William George A History of Japanese Literature William Heinemann 1899 Birnbaum A ed Monkey Brain Sushi New Tastes in Japanese Fiction Kodansha International JPN Carol Fairbanks Japanese Women Fiction Writers Scarecrow Press 2002 ISBN 0 8108 4086 3 Donald Keene Modern Japanese Literature Grove Press 1956 ISBN 0 394 17254 X World Within Walls Japanese Literature of The Pre Modern Era 1600 1867 Columbia University Press 1976 reprinted 1999 ISBN 0 231 11467 2 Dawn to the West Japanese Literature in the Modern Era Poetry Drama Criticism Columbia University Press 1984 reprinted 1998 ISBN 0 231 11435 4 Travellers of a Hundred Ages The Japanese as Revealed Through 1 000 Years of Diaries Columbia University Press 1989 reprinted 1999 ISBN 0 231 11437 0 Seeds in the Heart Japanese Literature from the Earliest Times to the Late Sixteenth Century Columbia University Press 1993 reprinted 1999 ISBN 0 231 11441 9 McCullough Helen Craig Classical Japanese prose an anthology Stanford Calif Stanford University Press 1990 ISBN 0 8047 1628 5 Miner Earl Roy Odagiri Hiroko and Morrell Robert E The Princeton companion to classical Japanese literature Princeton N J Princeton University Press 1985 ISBN 0 691 06599 3 Ema Tsutomu Taniyama Shigeru Ino Kenji Shinshu Kokugo Sōran 新修国語総覧 Kyoto Shobō 1977 revised 1981 reprinted 1982Further reading Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Literature of Japan Aston William George A history of Japanese literature NY 1899 online Karatani Kōjin Origins of modern Japanese literature Duke University Press 1993 Katō Shuichi A History of Japanese Literature The first thousand years Vol 1 Tokyo New York Kodansha International 1979 Keene Donald Japanese literature An introduction for Western readers 1953 Konishi Jin ichi A History of Japanese Literature Volume 3 The High Middle Ages Princeton University Press 2014 Shirna Haruo Suzuki Tomi Lurie David eds The Cambridge History of Japanese Literature Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2016 Primary sources Edit Keene Donald Anthology of Japanese Literature From the Earliest Era to the Mid Nineteenth Century Grove Atlantic Inc 2007 Online text libraries Edit Japanese Text Initiative University of Virginia Library Electronic Text Center Premodern Japanese Texts and Translations Michael Watson Meiji Gakuin UniversitySee also Edit Japan portal Literature portalList of Japanese writers List of Japanese classical texts Japanese poetry Aozora Bunko a repository of Japanese literature Japanese detective fiction Japanese science fiction Light novelExternal links EditJapanese Literature Publishing Project the Agency for Cultural Affairs of Japan Japanese Book News Website the Japan Foundation Electronic texts of pre modern Japanese literature by Satoko Shimazaki List of literary awards for fiction and nonfiction Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Japanese literature amp oldid 1137863133, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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