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Man'yōshū

The Man'yōshū (万葉集, pronounced [maɰ̃joꜜːɕɯː]; literally "Anthology of Ten Thousand Leaves")[a][1] is the oldest extant collection of Japanese waka (poetry in Classical Japanese),[b] compiled sometime after AD 759 during the Nara period. The anthology is one of the most revered of Japan's poetic compilations. The compiler, or the last in a series of compilers, is today widely believed to be Ōtomo no Yakamochi, although numerous other theories have been proposed. The chronologically last datable poem in the collection is from AD 759 (No. 4516).[2] It contains many poems from a much earlier period, with the bulk of the collection representing the period between AD 600 and 759.[3] The precise significance of the title is not known with certainty.

A replica of a Man'yōshū poem No. 8, by Nukata no Ōkimi

The Man'yōshū contains 20 volumes and more than 4,500 waka poems, and is divided into three genres: Zoka, songs at banquets and trips; Somonka, songs about love between men and women; and Banka, songs to mourn the death of people.[4] These songs were written by people of various statuses, such as the Emperor, aristocrats, junior officials, Sakimori soldiers (Sakimori songs), street performers, peasants, and Togoku folk songs (Eastern songs). There are more than 2,100 waka poems by unknown authors.[5][6]

The collection is divided into 20 parts or books; this number was followed in most later collections. The collection contains 265 chōka (long poems), 4,207 tanka (short poems), one an-renga (short connecting poem), one bussokusekika (a poem in the form 5-7-5-7-7-7; named for the poems inscribed on the Buddha's footprints at Yakushi-ji in Nara), four kanshi (Chinese poems), and 22 Chinese prose passages. Unlike later collections, such as the Kokin Wakashū, there is no preface.

The Man'yōshū is widely regarded as being a particularly unique Japanese work, though its poems and passages did not differ starkly from its contemporaneous (for Yakamochi's time) scholarly standard of Chinese literature and poetics; many entries of the Man'yōshū have a continental tone, earlier poems having Confucian or Taoist themes and later poems reflecting on Buddhist teachings. However, the Man'yōshū is considered singular, even in comparison with later works, in choosing primarily Ancient Japanese themes, extolling Shintō virtues of forthrightness (, makoto) and virility (masuraoburi). In addition, the language of many entries of the Man'yōshū exerts a powerful sentimental appeal to readers:

[T]his early collection has something of the freshness of dawn [...] There are irregularities not tolerated later, such as hypometric lines; there are evocative place names and makurakotoba; and there are evocative exclamations such as kamo, whose appeal is genuine even if incommunicable. In other words, the collection contains the appeal of an art at its pristine source with a romantic sense of venerable age and therefore of an ideal order since lost.[7]

The compilation of the Man'yōshū also preserves the names of earlier Japanese poetic compilations, these being the Ruijū Karin (類聚歌林, Forest of Classified Verses), several texts called the kokashū (古歌集, Collections of Antique Poems), as well as at least four family or individual anthologies known as kashū (家集) belonging to Hitomaro, Kanamura, Mushimaro and Sakimaro.[8]

Name edit

 
A page from the Man'yōshū

The literal translation of the kanji that make up the title Man'yōshū (万 — 葉 — 集) is "ten thousand — leaves — collection".

The principal interpretations of this name, according to the 20th century scholar Sen'ichi Hisamatsu [ja], are:

  1. A book that collects a great many poems;[9]
  2. A book for all generations;[9] and:
  3. A poetry collection that uses a large volume of paper.[9]

Of these, supporters of the first interpretation can be further divided into:

  1. Those who interpret the middle character as "words" (koto no ha, lit. "leaves of speech"), thus giving "ten thousand words", i.e. "many waka",[9] including Sengaku,[10] Shimokōbe Chōryū [ja],[11] Kada no Azumamaro[11] and Kamo no Mabuchi,[11] and;
  2. Those who interpret the middle character as literally referring to leaves of a tree, but as a metaphor for poems,[11] including Ueda Akinari,[11] Kimura Masakoto [ja],[11] Masayuki Okada [ja],[11] Torao Suzuki [ja],[11] Kiyotaka Hoshikawa [ja] and Susumu Nakanishi.[11]

Furthermore, supporters of the second interpretation of the name can be divided into:

  1. It was meant to express the intention that the work should last for all time[11] (proposed by Keichū,[11][c] and supported by Kamochi Masazumi [ja],[11] Inoue Michiyasu [ja],[11] Yoshio Yamada,[11] Noriyuki Kojima [ja][11] and Tadashi Ōkubo [ja][11]);
  2. It was meant to wish for long life for the emperor and empress[11] (Shinobu Origuchi [ja][11]);
  3. It was meant to indicate that the collection included poems from all ages[11] (proposed by Yamada[11]).

The third interpretation of the name - that it refers to a poetry collection that uses a large quantity of paper - was proposed by Yūkichi Takeda in his Man'yōshū Shinkai jō (萬葉集新解上),[11] but Takeda also accepted the second interpretation; his theory that the title refers to the large volume of paper used in the collection has also not gained much traction among other scholars.[11]

Periodization edit

The collection is customarily divided into four periods. The earliest dates to prehistoric or legendary pasts, from the time of Emperor Yūryaku (r. c. 456 – c. 479) to those of the little documented Emperor Yōmei (r. 585–587), Saimei (r. 594–661), and finally Tenji (r. 668–671) during the Taika Reforms and the time of Fujiwara no Kamatari (614–669). The second period covers the end of the 7th century, coinciding with the popularity of Kakinomoto no Hitomaro, one of Japan's greatest poets. The third period spans 700 – c. 730 and covers the works of such poets as Yamabe no Akahito, Ōtomo no Tabito and Yamanoue no Okura. The fourth period spans 730–760 and includes the work of the last great poet of this collection, the compiler Ōtomo no Yakamochi himself, who not only wrote many original poems but also edited, updated and refashioned an unknown number of ancient poems.

Poets edit

The vast majority of the poems of the Man'yōshū were composed over a period of roughly a century,[d] with scholars assigning the major poets of the collection to one or another of the four "periods" discussed above. Princess Nukata's poetry is included in that of the first period (645–672),[12] while the second period (673–701) is represented by the poetry of Kakinomoto no Hitomaro, generally regarded as the greatest of Man'yōshū poets and one of the most important poets in Japanese history.[13] The third period (702–729)[14] includes the poems of Takechi no Kurohito, whom Donald Keene called "[t]he only new poet of importance" of the early part of this period,[15] when Fujiwara no Fuhito promoted the composition of kanshi (poetry in classical Chinese).[16] Other "third period" poets include: Yamabe no Akahito, a poet who was once paired with Hitomaro but whose reputation has suffered in modern times;[17] Takahashi no Mushimaro, one of the last great chōka poets, who recorded a number of Japanese legends such as that of Ura no Shimako;[18] and Kasa no Kanamura, a high-ranking courtier who also composed chōka but not as well as Hitomaro or Mushimaro.[19] But the most prominent and important poets of the third period were Ōtomo no Tabito, Yakamochi's father and the head of a poetic circle in the Dazaifu,[20] and Tabito's friend Yamanoue no Okura, possibly an immigrant from the Korean kingdom of Paekche, whose poetry is highly idiosyncratic in both its language and subject matter and has been highly praised in modern times.[21] Yakamochi himself was a poet of the fourth period (730–759),[22] and according to Keene he "dominated" this period.[23] He composed the last dated poem of the anthology in 759.[24]

Linguistic significance edit

In addition to its artistic merits, the Man'yōshū is significant for using the earliest Japanese writing system, the cumbersome man'yōgana.[25] Though it was by no means the first use of this writing system—having previously been used in earlier works such as the Kojiki (712),[26]—it was influential enough to give the writing system its modern name, as man'yōgana means "the kana of the Man'yō[shū]".[27] This system uses Chinese characters in a variety of functions: logographically to represent Japanese words, phonetically to represent Japanese sounds, or sometimes in a combination of these. Such usage of Chinese characters to phonetically represent Japanese syllables eventually led to the birth of kana, as they were created from simplified cursive forms (hiragana) and fragments (katakana) of man'yōgana.[28]

Like the nearly all Old Japanese literature, the vast majority of the Man'yōshū is written in Western Old Japanese, the dialect of the capital region around Kyoto and Nara. However, specific parts of the collection, particularly volumes 14 and 20, are also highly valued by historical linguists for the information they provide on other Old Japanese dialects,[29] as these volumes collectively contain over 300 poems from the Azuma provinces of eastern Japan—what is now the regions of Chūbu, Kanto, and southern Tōhoku.

Translations edit

Julius Klaproth produced some early, severely flawed translations of Man'yōshū poetry. Donald Keene explained in a preface to the Nihon Gakujutsu Shinkō Kai edition of the Man'yōshū:

One "envoy" (hanka) to a long poem was translated as early as 1834 by the celebrated German orientalist Heinrich Julius Klaproth (1783–1835). Klaproth, having journeyed to Siberia in pursuit of strange languages, encountered some Japanese castaways, fishermen, hardly ideal mentors for the study of 8th century poetry. Not surprisingly, his translation was anything but accurate.[30]

In 1940, Columbia University Press published a translation created by a committee of Japanese scholars and revised by the English poet, Ralph Hodgson. This translation was accepted in the Japanese Translation Series of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO).[31]

Dutch scholar Jan L. Pierson completed an English translation of the Man'yōshū between 1929 and 1963, although this is described by Alexander Vovin as "seriously outdated" due to Pierson having "ignored or misunderstood many facts of Old Japanese grammar and phonology" which had been established in the 20th century.[32] Japanese scholars Honda Heihachiro (1967) and Suga Teruo (1991) both produced complete literary translations into English, with the former using rhymed iambic feet and preserving the 31-syllable count of tanka and the latter preserving the 5-7 pattern of syllables in each line.[32][33][34][35] Ian Hideo Levy published the first of what was intended to be a four volume English translation in 1981.[33][34][36]

In 2009, Alexander Vovin published the first volume of his English translation of the Man'yōshū, including commentaries, the original text, and translations of the prose elements in-between poems.[32] He completed, in order, volumes 15, 5, 14, 17, 18, 1, 19, 2, 20, and 16 before his death in 2022, with volume 10 set to be released posthumously.

Mokkan edit

In premodern Japan, officials used wooden slips or tablets of various sizes, known as mokkan, for recording memoranda, simple correspondence, and official dispatches.[37] Three mokkan that have been excavated contain text from the Man'yōshū.[38][39][40][41] A mokkan excavated from an archaeological site in Kizugawa, Kyoto, contains the first 11 characters of poem 2205 in volume 10, written in Man'yōgana. It is dated between 750 and 780, and its size is 23.4 by 2.4 by 1.2 cm (9.21 by 0.94 by 0.47 in). Inspection with an infrared camera revealed other characters, suggesting that the mokkan was used for writing practice. Another mokkan, excavated in 1997 from the Miyamachi archaeological site in Kōka, Shiga, contains poem 3807 in volume 16. It is dated to the middle of the 8th century, and is 2 centimetres (0.79 in) wide by 1 millimetre (0.039 in) thick. Lastly, a mokkan excavated at the Ishigami archaeological site in Asuka, Nara, contains the first 14 characters of poem 1391, in volume 7, written in Man'yōgana. Its size is 9.1 by 5.5 by 0.6 cm (3.58 by 2.17 by 0.24 in), and it is dated to the late 7th century, making it the oldest of the three.

Plant species cited edit

More than 150 species of grasses and trees are mentioned in approximately 1,500 entries of the Man'yōshū. A Man'yō shokubutsu-en (万葉植物園) is a botanical garden that attempts to contain every species and variety of plant mentioned in the anthology. There are dozens of these gardens around Japan. The first Man'yō shokubutsu-en opened in Kasuga Shrine in 1932.[42][43]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ See § Name below
  2. ^ It is not the oldest anthology of poetry written in Japan, since the Kaifūsō, an anthology of Japanese kanshi—poetry in Classical Chinese—predates it by at least several years.
  3. ^ Keichū also recognized the first interpretation as a possibility.[11]
  4. ^ A small number of poems are attributed to figures from the ancient past, such as Emperor Yūryaku.

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Videen, Susan Downing (1989-10-26). Heichū Monogatari in Literary History. Harvard University Asia Center. ISBN 978-1-68417-275-7.
  2. ^ Satake (2004: 555)
  3. ^ Shirane, Haruo (2012-09-25). Traditional Japanese Literature: An Anthology, Beginnings to 1600, Abridged Edition. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-50453-9.
  4. ^ Richard, Kenneth L. (1983). "Review of The Ten Thousand Leaves. A Translation of the Man'yoshu, Japan's Premier Anthology of Classical Poetry. Volume One.; From the Country of Eight Islands. An Anthology of Japanese Poetry.; The Zen Poems of Ryokan". Pacific Affairs. 56 (1): 157–159. doi:10.2307/2758798. ISSN 0030-851X. JSTOR 2758798.
  5. ^ Manyo 2001
  6. ^ Sugano 2006
  7. ^ Earl Miner; Hiroko Odagiri; Robert E. Morrell (1985). The Princeton Companion to Classical Japanese Literature. Princeton University Press. pp. 170–171. ISBN 978-0-691-06599-1.
  8. ^ "Man'yōshū • . A History . . of Japan . 日本歴史". . A History . . of Japan . 日本歴史. Retrieved 2022-05-08.
  9. ^ a b c d Hisamatsu 1973, p. 16.
  10. ^ Hisamatsu 1973, pp. 16–17.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Hisamatsu 1973, p. 17.
  12. ^ Keene, pp. 92–102.
  13. ^ Keene, pp. 102–118.
  14. ^ Keene, pp. 118–146.
  15. ^ Keene, p. 119.
  16. ^ Keene, pp. 118–119.
  17. ^ Keene, pp. 123–127.
  18. ^ Keene, pp. 127–128.
  19. ^ Keene, pp. 128–130.
  20. ^ Keene, pp. 130–138.
  21. ^ Keene, pp. 138–146.
  22. ^ Keene, pp. 146–157.
  23. ^ Keene, p. 146.
  24. ^ Keene, p. 89.
  25. ^ Shuichi Kato; Don Sanderson (15 April 2013). A History of Japanese Literature: From the Manyoshu to Modern Times. Routledge. p. 24. ISBN 978-1-136-61368-5.
  26. ^ Roy Andrew Miller (1967). The Japanese Language. Tuttle. p. 32., cited in Peter Nosco (1990). Remembering Paradise: Nativism and Nostalgia in Eighteenth-century Japan. Harvard Univ Asia Center. p. 182. ISBN 978-0-674-76007-3.
  27. ^ Bjarke Frellesvig (29 July 2010). A History of the Japanese Language. Cambridge University Press. p. 14. ISBN 978-1-139-48880-8.
  28. ^ Peter T. Daniels (1996). The World's Writing Systems. Oxford University Press. p. 212. ISBN 978-0-19-507993-7.
  29. ^ Uemura 1981:25–26.[citation needed]
  30. ^ Nippon Gakujutsu Shinkōkai. (1965). The Man'yōshū, p. iii.
  31. ^ Nippon Gakujutsu Shinkōkai, p. ii.
  32. ^ a b c Vovin, Alexander (2009-08-01). Man’yōshū (Book 15). BRILL. doi:10.1163/9789004212992. ISBN 978-90-04-21299-2.
  33. ^ a b Rutledge, Eric (1983). "The Man'yoshu in English". Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies. JSTOR. 43 (1): 263. doi:10.2307/2719024. ISSN 0073-0548.
  34. ^ a b Hare, Thomas Blenman (1982). "Review: The Ten Thousand Leaves: A Translation of the Man'yōshū, Japan's Premier Anthology of Classical Poetry. Vol. 1". The Journal of Asian Studies. Duke University Press. 41 (3): 597–599. doi:10.2307/2055272. ISSN 0021-9118.
  35. ^ Honda, H. H. (1967). The Manyoshu. A New and Complete Translation. Tokyo.
  36. ^ Levy, I. H. (1981). The Man'yoshu. English Ten Thousand Leaves: A Translation of the Man'yoshu, Japan's Premier Anthology of Classical Poetry. Princeton University Press.
  37. ^ Piggott, Joan R. (Winter 1990). "Mokkan: Wooden Documents from the Nara Period". Monumenta Nipponica. Sophia University. 45 (4): 449–450. doi:10.2307/2385379. JSTOR 2385379.
  38. ^ . Asahi. 2008-10-17. Archived from the original on October 20, 2008. Retrieved 2008-10-31.
  39. ^ "万葉集:3例目、万葉歌木簡 編さん期と一致--京都の遺跡・8世紀後半". Mainichi. 2008-10-23. Retrieved 2008-10-31.[dead link]
  40. ^ . Mainichi. 2008-10-18. Archived from the original on October 20, 2008. Retrieved 2008-10-31.
  41. ^ "万葉集:和歌刻んだ最古の木簡出土 奈良・明日香". Asahi. 2008-10-17. Retrieved 2008-10-31.[dead link]
  42. ^ "Manyo Shokubutsu-en(萬葉集に詠まれた植物を植栽する植物園)" (in Japanese). Nara: Kasuga Shrine. Retrieved 2009-08-05.
  43. ^ (PDF) (in Japanese). Nara: Kasuga Shrine. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-10-05. Retrieved 2009-08-05.

Works cited edit

Further reading edit

Texts and translations
  • J.L.Pierson (1929): The Manyōśū. Translated and Annotated, Book 1. Late E.J.Brill LTD, Leyden 1929
  • The Japanese Classics Translation Committee (1940): The Manyōshū. One Thousand Poems Selected and Translated from the Japanese. Iwanami, Tokyo 1940
  • Kenneth Yasuda (1960): The Reed Plains. Ancient Japanese Lyrics from the Manyōśū with Interpretive Paintings by Sanko Inoue. Charles E. Tuttle Company, Tokyo 1960
  • Honda, H. H. (tr.) (1967). The Manyoshu: A New and Complete Translation. The Hokuseido Press, Tokyo.
  • Theodore De Bary: Manyōshū. Columbia University Press, New York 1969
  • Cranston, Edwin A. (1993). A Waka Anthology: Volume One: The Gem-Glistening Cup. Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-3157-7.
  • Kodansha (1983). "Man'yoshu". Kodansha Encyclopedia of Japan. Kodansha.
  • Nakanishi, Susumu (1985). Man'yōshū Jiten (Man'yōshū zen'yakuchū genbun-tsuki bekkan) (paperback ed.). Tokyo: Kōdansha. ISBN 978-4-06-183651-8.
  • Levy, Ian Hideo (1987). The Ten Thousand Leaves: A Translation of the Man'yoshu. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-00029-9. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  • Suga, Teruo (1991). The Man'yo-shu : a complete English translation in 5–7 rhythm. Tokyo: Kanda Educational Foundation, Kanda Institute of Foreign Languages. ISBN 978-4-483-00140-2. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help), Kanda University of International Studies, Chiba City
  • Nippon Gakujutsu Shinkokai (2005). 1000 Poems From The Manyoshu: The Complete Nippon Gakujutsu Shinkokai Translation. Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0-486-43959-4.
  • (in Japanese). University of Virginia Library Japanese Text Initiative. Archived from the original on 2006-05-19. Retrieved 2006-07-10.
General

External links edit

yōshū, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, 2018, learn, when, r. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Man yōshu news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Man yōshu 万葉集 pronounced maɰ joꜜːɕɯː literally Anthology of Ten Thousand Leaves a 1 is the oldest extant collection of Japanese waka poetry in Classical Japanese b compiled sometime after AD 759 during the Nara period The anthology is one of the most revered of Japan s poetic compilations The compiler or the last in a series of compilers is today widely believed to be Ōtomo no Yakamochi although numerous other theories have been proposed The chronologically last datable poem in the collection is from AD 759 No 4516 2 It contains many poems from a much earlier period with the bulk of the collection representing the period between AD 600 and 759 3 The precise significance of the title is not known with certainty A replica of a Man yōshu poem No 8 by Nukata no ŌkimiThe Man yōshu contains 20 volumes and more than 4 500 waka poems and is divided into three genres Zoka songs at banquets and trips Somonka songs about love between men and women and Banka songs to mourn the death of people 4 These songs were written by people of various statuses such as the Emperor aristocrats junior officials Sakimori soldiers Sakimori songs street performers peasants and Togoku folk songs Eastern songs There are more than 2 100 waka poems by unknown authors 5 6 The collection is divided into 20 parts or books this number was followed in most later collections The collection contains 265 chōka long poems 4 207 tanka short poems one an renga short connecting poem one bussokusekika a poem in the form 5 7 5 7 7 7 named for the poems inscribed on the Buddha s footprints at Yakushi ji in Nara four kanshi Chinese poems and 22 Chinese prose passages Unlike later collections such as the Kokin Wakashu there is no preface The Man yōshu is widely regarded as being a particularly unique Japanese work though its poems and passages did not differ starkly from its contemporaneous for Yakamochi s time scholarly standard of Chinese literature and poetics many entries of the Man yōshu have a continental tone earlier poems having Confucian or Taoist themes and later poems reflecting on Buddhist teachings However the Man yōshu is considered singular even in comparison with later works in choosing primarily Ancient Japanese themes extolling Shintō virtues of forthrightness 真 makoto and virility masuraoburi In addition the language of many entries of the Man yōshu exerts a powerful sentimental appeal to readers T his early collection has something of the freshness of dawn There are irregularities not tolerated later such as hypometric lines there are evocative place names and makurakotoba and there are evocative exclamations such as kamo whose appeal is genuine even if incommunicable In other words the collection contains the appeal of an art at its pristine source with a romantic sense of venerable age and therefore of an ideal order since lost 7 The compilation of the Man yōshu also preserves the names of earlier Japanese poetic compilations these being the Ruiju Karin 類聚歌林 Forest of Classified Verses several texts called the kokashu 古歌集 Collections of Antique Poems as well as at least four family or individual anthologies known as kashu 家集 belonging to Hitomaro Kanamura Mushimaro and Sakimaro 8 Contents 1 Name 2 Periodization 3 Poets 4 Linguistic significance 5 Translations 6 Mokkan 7 Plant species cited 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 Works cited 11 Further reading 12 External linksName edit nbsp A page from the Man yōshuThe literal translation of the kanji that make up the title Man yōshu 万 葉 集 is ten thousand leaves collection The principal interpretations of this name according to the 20th century scholar Sen ichi Hisamatsu ja are A book that collects a great many poems 9 A book for all generations 9 and A poetry collection that uses a large volume of paper 9 Of these supporters of the first interpretation can be further divided into Those who interpret the middle character as words koto no ha lit leaves of speech thus giving ten thousand words i e many waka 9 including Sengaku 10 Shimokōbe Chōryu ja 11 Kada no Azumamaro 11 and Kamo no Mabuchi 11 and Those who interpret the middle character as literally referring to leaves of a tree but as a metaphor for poems 11 including Ueda Akinari 11 Kimura Masakoto ja 11 Masayuki Okada ja 11 Torao Suzuki ja 11 Kiyotaka Hoshikawa ja and Susumu Nakanishi 11 Furthermore supporters of the second interpretation of the name can be divided into It was meant to express the intention that the work should last for all time 11 proposed by Keichu 11 c and supported by Kamochi Masazumi ja 11 Inoue Michiyasu ja 11 Yoshio Yamada 11 Noriyuki Kojima ja 11 and Tadashi Ōkubo ja 11 It was meant to wish for long life for the emperor and empress 11 Shinobu Origuchi ja 11 It was meant to indicate that the collection included poems from all ages 11 proposed by Yamada 11 The third interpretation of the name that it refers to a poetry collection that uses a large quantity of paper was proposed by Yukichi Takeda in his Man yōshu Shinkai jō 萬葉集新解上 11 but Takeda also accepted the second interpretation his theory that the title refers to the large volume of paper used in the collection has also not gained much traction among other scholars 11 Periodization editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message The collection is customarily divided into four periods The earliest dates to prehistoric or legendary pasts from the time of Emperor Yuryaku r c 456 c 479 to those of the little documented Emperor Yōmei r 585 587 Saimei r 594 661 and finally Tenji r 668 671 during the Taika Reforms and the time of Fujiwara no Kamatari 614 669 The second period covers the end of the 7th century coinciding with the popularity of Kakinomoto no Hitomaro one of Japan s greatest poets The third period spans 700 c 730 and covers the works of such poets as Yamabe no Akahito Ōtomo no Tabito and Yamanoue no Okura The fourth period spans 730 760 and includes the work of the last great poet of this collection the compiler Ōtomo no Yakamochi himself who not only wrote many original poems but also edited updated and refashioned an unknown number of ancient poems Poets editMain article List of Man yōshu poets The vast majority of the poems of the Man yōshu were composed over a period of roughly a century d with scholars assigning the major poets of the collection to one or another of the four periods discussed above Princess Nukata s poetry is included in that of the first period 645 672 12 while the second period 673 701 is represented by the poetry of Kakinomoto no Hitomaro generally regarded as the greatest of Man yōshu poets and one of the most important poets in Japanese history 13 The third period 702 729 14 includes the poems of Takechi no Kurohito whom Donald Keene called t he only new poet of importance of the early part of this period 15 when Fujiwara no Fuhito promoted the composition of kanshi poetry in classical Chinese 16 Other third period poets include Yamabe no Akahito a poet who was once paired with Hitomaro but whose reputation has suffered in modern times 17 Takahashi no Mushimaro one of the last great chōka poets who recorded a number of Japanese legends such as that of Ura no Shimako 18 and Kasa no Kanamura a high ranking courtier who also composed chōka but not as well as Hitomaro or Mushimaro 19 But the most prominent and important poets of the third period were Ōtomo no Tabito Yakamochi s father and the head of a poetic circle in the Dazaifu 20 and Tabito s friend Yamanoue no Okura possibly an immigrant from the Korean kingdom of Paekche whose poetry is highly idiosyncratic in both its language and subject matter and has been highly praised in modern times 21 Yakamochi himself was a poet of the fourth period 730 759 22 and according to Keene he dominated this period 23 He composed the last dated poem of the anthology in 759 24 Linguistic significance editIn addition to its artistic merits the Man yōshu is significant for using the earliest Japanese writing system the cumbersome man yōgana 25 Though it was by no means the first use of this writing system having previously been used in earlier works such as the Kojiki 712 26 it was influential enough to give the writing system its modern name as man yōgana means the kana of the Man yō shu 27 This system uses Chinese characters in a variety of functions logographically to represent Japanese words phonetically to represent Japanese sounds or sometimes in a combination of these Such usage of Chinese characters to phonetically represent Japanese syllables eventually led to the birth of kana as they were created from simplified cursive forms hiragana and fragments katakana of man yōgana 28 Like the nearly all Old Japanese literature the vast majority of the Man yōshu is written in Western Old Japanese the dialect of the capital region around Kyoto and Nara However specific parts of the collection particularly volumes 14 and 20 are also highly valued by historical linguists for the information they provide on other Old Japanese dialects 29 as these volumes collectively contain over 300 poems from the Azuma provinces of eastern Japan what is now the regions of Chubu Kanto and southern Tōhoku Translations editJulius Klaproth produced some early severely flawed translations of Man yōshu poetry Donald Keene explained in a preface to the Nihon Gakujutsu Shinkō Kai edition of the Man yōshu One envoy hanka to a long poem was translated as early as 1834 by the celebrated German orientalist Heinrich Julius Klaproth 1783 1835 Klaproth having journeyed to Siberia in pursuit of strange languages encountered some Japanese castaways fishermen hardly ideal mentors for the study of 8th century poetry Not surprisingly his translation was anything but accurate 30 In 1940 Columbia University Press published a translation created by a committee of Japanese scholars and revised by the English poet Ralph Hodgson This translation was accepted in the Japanese Translation Series of the United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization UNESCO 31 Dutch scholar Jan L Pierson completed an English translation of the Man yōshu between 1929 and 1963 although this is described by Alexander Vovin as seriously outdated due to Pierson having ignored or misunderstood many facts of Old Japanese grammar and phonology which had been established in the 20th century 32 Japanese scholars Honda Heihachiro 1967 and Suga Teruo 1991 both produced complete literary translations into English with the former using rhymed iambic feet and preserving the 31 syllable count of tanka and the latter preserving the 5 7 pattern of syllables in each line 32 33 34 35 Ian Hideo Levy published the first of what was intended to be a four volume English translation in 1981 33 34 36 In 2009 Alexander Vovin published the first volume of his English translation of the Man yōshu including commentaries the original text and translations of the prose elements in between poems 32 He completed in order volumes 15 5 14 17 18 1 19 2 20 and 16 before his death in 2022 with volume 10 set to be released posthumously Mokkan editIn premodern Japan officials used wooden slips or tablets of various sizes known as mokkan for recording memoranda simple correspondence and official dispatches 37 Three mokkan that have been excavated contain text from the Man yōshu 38 39 40 41 A mokkan excavated from an archaeological site in Kizugawa Kyoto contains the first 11 characters of poem 2205 in volume 10 written in Man yōgana It is dated between 750 and 780 and its size is 23 4 by 2 4 by 1 2 cm 9 21 by 0 94 by 0 47 in Inspection with an infrared camera revealed other characters suggesting that the mokkan was used for writing practice Another mokkan excavated in 1997 from the Miyamachi archaeological site in Kōka Shiga contains poem 3807 in volume 16 It is dated to the middle of the 8th century and is 2 centimetres 0 79 in wide by 1 millimetre 0 039 in thick Lastly a mokkan excavated at the Ishigami archaeological site in Asuka Nara contains the first 14 characters of poem 1391 in volume 7 written in Man yōgana Its size is 9 1 by 5 5 by 0 6 cm 3 58 by 2 17 by 0 24 in and it is dated to the late 7th century making it the oldest of the three Plant species cited editMain article Man yō botanical garden More than 150 species of grasses and trees are mentioned in approximately 1 500 entries of the Man yōshu A Man yō shokubutsu en 万葉植物園 is a botanical garden that attempts to contain every species and variety of plant mentioned in the anthology There are dozens of these gardens around Japan The first Man yō shokubutsu en opened in Kasuga Shrine in 1932 42 43 See also editKotodama Umi Yukaba ReiwaNotes edit See Name below It is not the oldest anthology of poetry written in Japan since the Kaifusō an anthology of Japanese kanshi poetry in Classical Chinese predates it by at least several years Keichu also recognized the first interpretation as a possibility 11 A small number of poems are attributed to figures from the ancient past such as Emperor Yuryaku References editCitations edit Videen Susan Downing 1989 10 26 Heichu Monogatari in Literary History Harvard University Asia Center ISBN 978 1 68417 275 7 Satake 2004 555 Shirane Haruo 2012 09 25 Traditional Japanese Literature An Anthology Beginnings to 1600 Abridged Edition Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 50453 9 Richard Kenneth L 1983 Review of The Ten Thousand Leaves A Translation of the Man yoshu Japan s Premier Anthology of Classical Poetry Volume One From the Country of Eight Islands An Anthology of Japanese Poetry The Zen Poems of Ryokan Pacific Affairs 56 1 157 159 doi 10 2307 2758798 ISSN 0030 851X JSTOR 2758798 Manyo 2001 Sugano 2006 Earl Miner Hiroko Odagiri Robert E Morrell 1985 The Princeton Companion to Classical Japanese Literature Princeton University Press pp 170 171 ISBN 978 0 691 06599 1 Man yōshu A History of Japan 日本歴史 A History of Japan 日本歴史 Retrieved 2022 05 08 a b c d Hisamatsu 1973 p 16 Hisamatsu 1973 pp 16 17 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Hisamatsu 1973 p 17 Keene pp 92 102sfnm error no target CITEREFKeene help Keene pp 102 118sfnm error no target CITEREFKeene help Keene pp 118 146sfnm error no target CITEREFKeene help Keene p 119sfnm error no target CITEREFKeene help Keene pp 118 119sfnm error no target CITEREFKeene help Keene pp 123 127sfnm error no target CITEREFKeene help Keene pp 127 128sfnm error no target CITEREFKeene help Keene pp 128 130sfnm error no target CITEREFKeene help Keene pp 130 138sfnm error no target CITEREFKeene help Keene pp 138 146sfnm error no target CITEREFKeene help Keene pp 146 157sfnm error no target CITEREFKeene help Keene p 146sfnm error no target CITEREFKeene help Keene p 89sfnm error no target CITEREFKeene help Shuichi Kato Don Sanderson 15 April 2013 A History of Japanese Literature From the Manyoshu to Modern Times Routledge p 24 ISBN 978 1 136 61368 5 Roy Andrew Miller 1967 The Japanese Language Tuttle p 32 cited in Peter Nosco 1990 Remembering Paradise Nativism and Nostalgia in Eighteenth century Japan Harvard Univ Asia Center p 182 ISBN 978 0 674 76007 3 Bjarke Frellesvig 29 July 2010 A History of the Japanese Language Cambridge University Press p 14 ISBN 978 1 139 48880 8 Peter T Daniels 1996 The World s Writing Systems Oxford University Press p 212 ISBN 978 0 19 507993 7 Uemura 1981 25 26 citation needed Nippon Gakujutsu Shinkōkai 1965 The Man yōshu p iii Nippon Gakujutsu Shinkōkai p ii a b c Vovin Alexander 2009 08 01 Man yōshu Book 15 BRILL doi 10 1163 9789004212992 ISBN 978 90 04 21299 2 a b Rutledge Eric 1983 The Man yoshu in English Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies JSTOR 43 1 263 doi 10 2307 2719024 ISSN 0073 0548 a b Hare Thomas Blenman 1982 Review The Ten Thousand Leaves A Translation of the Man yōshu Japan s Premier Anthology of Classical Poetry Vol 1 The Journal of Asian Studies Duke University Press 41 3 597 599 doi 10 2307 2055272 ISSN 0021 9118 Honda H H 1967 The Manyoshu A New and Complete Translation Tokyo Levy I H 1981 The Man yoshu English Ten Thousand Leaves A Translation of the Man yoshu Japan s Premier Anthology of Classical Poetry Princeton University Press Piggott Joan R Winter 1990 Mokkan Wooden Documents from the Nara Period Monumenta Nipponica Sophia University 45 4 449 450 doi 10 2307 2385379 JSTOR 2385379 7世紀の木簡に万葉の歌 奈良 石神遺跡 60年更新 Asahi 2008 10 17 Archived from the original on October 20 2008 Retrieved 2008 10 31 万葉集 3例目 万葉歌木簡 編さん期と一致 京都の遺跡 8世紀後半 Mainichi 2008 10 23 Retrieved 2008 10 31 dead link 万葉集 万葉歌 最古の木簡 7世紀後半 奈良 石神遺跡 Mainichi 2008 10 18 Archived from the original on October 20 2008 Retrieved 2008 10 31 万葉集 和歌刻んだ最古の木簡出土 奈良 明日香 Asahi 2008 10 17 Retrieved 2008 10 31 dead link Manyo Shokubutsu en 萬葉集に詠まれた植物を植栽する植物園 in Japanese Nara Kasuga Shrine Retrieved 2009 08 05 Man y Botanical garden 萬葉植物園 PDF in Japanese Nara Kasuga Shrine Archived from the original PDF on 2011 10 05 Retrieved 2009 08 05 Works cited edit Hisamatsu Sen ichi 1973 Man yōshu no Meigi In Sen ichi Hisamatsu ed Man yō Kōza I Tokyo Yuseidō pp 16 27 Keene Donald 1999 1993 A History of Japanese Literature Vol 1 Seeds in the Heart Japanese Literature from Earliest Times to the Late Sixteenth Century paperback ed New York NY Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 11441 7 Satake Akihiro Hideo Yamada Rikio Kudō Masao Ōtani Yoshiyuki Yamazaki 2004 Shin Nihon Koten Bungaku Taikei Bekkan Man yōshu Sakuin in Japanese Tōkyō Iwanami Shoten ISBN 978 4 00 240105 8 Further reading editTexts and translationsJ L Pierson 1929 The Manyōsu Translated and Annotated Book 1 Late E J Brill LTD Leyden 1929 The Japanese Classics Translation Committee 1940 The Manyōshu One Thousand Poems Selected and Translated from the Japanese Iwanami Tokyo 1940 Kenneth Yasuda 1960 The Reed Plains Ancient Japanese Lyrics from the Manyōsu with Interpretive Paintings by Sanko Inoue Charles E Tuttle Company Tokyo 1960 Honda H H tr 1967 The Manyoshu A New and Complete Translation The Hokuseido Press Tokyo Theodore De Bary Manyōshu Columbia University Press New York 1969 Cranston Edwin A 1993 A Waka Anthology Volume One The Gem Glistening Cup Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 3157 7 Kodansha 1983 Man yoshu Kodansha Encyclopedia of Japan Kodansha Nakanishi Susumu 1985 Man yōshu Jiten Man yōshu zen yakuchu genbun tsuki bekkan paperback ed Tokyo Kōdansha ISBN 978 4 06 183651 8 Levy Ian Hideo 1987 The Ten Thousand Leaves A Translation of the Man yoshu Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 00029 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Suga Teruo 1991 The Man yo shu a complete English translation in 5 7 rhythm Tokyo Kanda Educational Foundation Kanda Institute of Foreign Languages ISBN 978 4 483 00140 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Kanda University of International Studies Chiba City Nippon Gakujutsu Shinkokai 2005 1000 Poems From The Manyoshu The Complete Nippon Gakujutsu Shinkokai Translation Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 43959 4 Online edition of the Man yōshu in Japanese University of Virginia Library Japanese Text Initiative Archived from the original on 2006 05 19 Retrieved 2006 07 10 GeneralCranston Edwin A 1993 A Waka Anthology Volume One The Gem Glistening Cup Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 3157 7 Nakanishi Susumu Itō Haku Gomi Tomohide Ono Hiroshi Inaoka Kōji Kinoshita Masatoshi Ōkubo Tadashi Hayashi Tsutomu 1983 Man yōshu 万葉集 Nihon Koten Bungaku Daijiten 日本古典文学大辞典 in Japanese Vol 5 Tokyo Iwanami Shoten pp 554 571 OCLC 11917421 万葉集 Manyoshu in Japanese paperback ed Kadokawa Shoten 2001 ISBN 978 4043574063 Sugano Ayako 2006 万葉集 に詠まれた7 8世紀の服飾 服飾が暗示する意味と役割 A Study on Costumes in the 7th and 8th Centuries Represented in Manyoshu Meaning and Role Implied by Costume Bunka Gakuen University Bulletin in Japanese 37 67 76 External links edit nbsp Japanese Wikisource has original text related to this article 万葉集 Manyōshu from the University of Virginia Japanese Text Initiative website Manuscript scans at Waseda University Library 1709 1858 unknown Manyōshu Columbia University Press Nippon Gakujutsu Shinkokai translation 1940 1965 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Man 27yōshu amp oldid 1180928847, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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