JAPANESE LITERATURE
Japanese literature spans
a period of almost two millennia of writing. Early work was heavily
influenced by Chinese literature, but Japan quickly developed a style and
quality of its own. When Japan reopened its ports to Western trading and
diplomacy in the 19th century, Western Literature had a strong effect on
Japanese writers, and this influence is still seen today.
As with all literature, Japanese literature is best read in the original.
Due to deep linguistic and cultural differences, many Japanese words and
phrases are not easily translated. Although Japanese literature and Japanese
authors are perhaps not as well known in the west as those in the European
and American canons, Japan possesses an ancient and rich literary tradition
that draws upon a millennium and a half of written records.
Japanese Literature -
History
There is debate
regarding the classification of periods in Japanese literature. The
following is a general guide based on important political and cultural
events. Given the immense span of years covered in this article, it is not
comprehensive, but rather highlights prominent works and authors of the
various periods. All names are in the Japanese order of surname first, given
name second.
Japanese Ancient
Literature (pre-8th Century)
With the introduction
of kanji (漢字, lit. "Chinese characters") from the Asian mainland, writing
became possible, as there was no native writing system. Consequently, the
only literary language was classical Chinese to begin with; later, the
characters were adapted to write Japanese, creating what is known as the man'yōgana, the earliest form of kana, or syllabic writing. Works created in
the Nara Period include Kojiki (712: a partly mythological, partly accurate
history of Japan), Nihonshoki (720: a chronicle with a slightly more solid
foundation in historical records than the Kojiki), and Man'yōshū (759: a
poetry anthology). The language used in the works of this period differs
significantly from later periods in both its grammar and phonology. Even in
this early era, significant dialectal differences within Japanese are
apparent.
Japanese Classical
Literature (8th Century - 12th Century)
Classical Japanese
literature generally refers to literature produced during the Heian Period,
what some would consider a golden era of art and literature. The Tale of
Genji (early 11th century) by Murasaki Shikibu is considered the pre-eminent
masterpiece of Heian fiction and an early example of a work of fiction in
the form of a novel. Other important works of this period include the Kokin
Wakashu (905, waka anthology) and The Pillow Book (990s), the latter written
by Murasaki Shikibu's contemporary and rival, Sei Shonagon, about the life,
loves, and pastimes of nobles in the Emperor's court. The iroha poem was
also written during the early this period, becoming the standard order for
the Japanese syllabary until 19th century Meiji era reforms.
In this time the imperial court and highest ranked kuge patronized the
poets. There was no professional poets but most of them were courtiers or
ladies-in-waiting. Editing anthologies of poetry was one of national
enterprises. Reflecting the aristocratic atmosphere, the poetry in that time
was elegant and sophiscated and expressed their emotions in rhetorical
style.
Japanese Medieval
Literature (13th Century - 16th Century)
A period of civil war
and strife in Japan, this era is represented by The Tale of the Heike
(1371). This story is 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 Kenko's Tsurezuregusa (1331). Writing Japanese using a mixture of
kanji and kana the way it is done today started with these works in the
medieval period. Literature of this period evinces the influences that
Buddhism and Zen ethics had on the emerging samurai class. Work from this
period is noted for insights into life and death, simple lifestyles, and
redemption of killing.
Other remarkable genres in this period were renga, collective poetry and Noh
theatre. Both were rapidly developed in the middle of the 14th century, that
is, early Muromachi period.
Japanese Early-Modern
Literature (17th Century - mid-19th Century)
Literature during this
time was written during the largely peaceful Tokugawa Period (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 joruri and
kabuki dramatist Chikamatsu Monzaemon became popular starting at the end of
the 17th century. Matsuo Bashō, best known for Oku no Hosomichi (奥の細道, 1702:
a travel diary variously rendered 'Narrow Road to the Far North', 'Narrow
Road to Oku', and so on into English), is considered to be one of the first
and greatest masters of haiku poetry. Hokusai, perhaps Japan's most famous
wood block print artist, illustrated fiction aside from his famous 36 Views
of Mount Fuji.
Many genres of literature made their debut during the Edo Period, helped by
a rising literacy rate that reached well over 90% (according to some
sources), as well as the development of a library(-like) system. Ihara
Saikaku might be said to have given birth to the modern consciousness of the
novel in Japan. Jippensha Ikku (十返舎一九) wrote Tokaido chuhizakurige
(東海道中膝栗毛), a mix of travelogue and comedy. Ueda Akinari initiated the modern
tradition of weird fiction in Japan with his Ugetsu Monogatari, while
Kyokutei Bakin wrote the extremely popular fantasy/historical romance Nanso
Satomi Hakkenden (南総里見八犬伝). Santō Kyōden wrote tales of the gay quarters
until the Kansei edicts banned such works. Genres included horror, crime
stories, morality stories, comedy, and pornography—often accompanied by
colorful woodcut prints. Formats included yomihon, various zōshi, and
chapbooks.
Japanese Meiji and
Taisho Literature (late 19th Century - WW II)
The Meiji era marks
the re-opening of Japan to the West, and 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 have struggled with a whole galaxy of new ideas and artistic
schools, but novelists were the first to successfully assimilate some of
these concepts. A new colloquial literature developed centering on the "I
novel," with some unusual protagonists as in Natsume Soseki's Wagahai wa
neko de aru (I Am a Cat). Other famous novels written by him include Botchan
and Kokoro (1914). Shiga Naoya, the so called "god of the novel," and Mori
Ogai were instrumental in adopting and adapting Western literary conventions
and techniques. Akutagawa Ryunosuke is known especially for his historical
short stories. Ozaki Koyo, Izumi Kyoka, and Higuchi Ichiyo represent a
strain of writers whose style hearkens back to early-Modern Japanese
literature.
War-time Japan saw the debut of several authors best known for the beauty of
their language and their tales of love and sensuality, notably Tanizaki
Junichiro and Japan's first winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature,
Kawabata Yasunari, a master of psychological fiction.
Japanese Post-war
literature
World War II, and
Japan's defeat, influenced Japanese literature. Many authors wrote stories
of disaffection, loss of purpose, and the coping with defeat. Dazai Osamu's
novel The Setting Sun tells of a returning soldier from Manchukuo. Mishima
Yukio, well-known for both his nihilistic writing and his controversial
suicide by seppuku, began writing in the post-war period.
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, Oe Kenzaburo wrote his most well-known work, A
Personal Matter in 1964 and became Japan's second winner of the Nobel Prize
for Literature.
Inoue Mitsuaki had long been concerned with the atomic bomb and continued in
the 1980s to write on problems of the nuclear age, while Endo Shusaku
depicted the religious dilemma of the Kakure Kirishitan, Roman Catholics in
feudal Japan, as a springboard to address spiritual problems. Inoue Yasushi
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 Abe Kobo, who wrote fantastic novels such as
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. Furui Yoshikichi tellingly 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 Todo Shizuko 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 Koenji, Tokyo), and the life
of a Meiji period ukiyo-e artist. In international literature, Ishiguro
Kazuo, a native of Japan, had taken up residence in Britain and won
Britain's prestigious Booker Prize.
Murakami Haruki is one of the most popular and controversial of today's
Japanese authors. His genre-defying, humorous and fantastic works have
sparked fierce debates in Japan over whether they are true "literature" or
simple pop-fiction: Oe Kenzaburo has been one of his harshest critics.
However, Western critics are nearly unanimous in assessing Murakami's works
as having serious literary value. Some of his most well-known works include
Norwegian Wood (1987) and The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle (1994-1995). Another
best-selling contemporary author is Banana Yoshimoto.
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 reemerged,
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, 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 remerged in the 1950s, and the newer entrants into this field, many of
them younger women, brought new vitality to it in the 1980s.
Manga (comic books) have penetrated almost every sector of the popular
market. They include virtually any field of human interest, such as a
multivolume high-school history of Japan and, for the adult market, a manga
introduction to economics, and pornography. Manga represented between 20 and
30 percent of annual publications at the end of the 1980s, in sales of some
¥400 billion per year.
The Future of
Japanese Literature
Entering the 21st
century, there is controversy whether the rise in popular forms of
entertainment such as manga and anime has caused a decline in the quality of
literature in Japan. The counter-argument is that manga positively affect
modern literature by encouraging younger people to read more.
Significant Japanese
authors and works
Famous authors and
literary works of significant stature are listed in chronological order
below. For an exhaustive list of authors see List of Japanese authors:
Classical Literature
Sei Shonagon (c.~966 - c.10??): The Pillow Book
Murasaki Shikibu (c.973 - c.1025): The Tale of Genji
Medieval Literature
The Tale of the Heike (1371)
Early-Modern
Literature
Ihara Saikaku (1642 – 1693)
Matsuo Basho (1644 - 1694)
Ueda Akinari (1734 - 1809)
Santo Kyoden (1761 - 1816)
Juppensha Ikku (1765 - 1831)
Kyokutei Bakin (1767 - 1858)
Late-Modern Literature
Mori Ogai (1862 - 1922)
Ozaki Koyo (1867 - 1903)
Natsume Soseki (1867 - 1916)
Izumi Kyoka (1873 - 1939)
Shiga Naoya (1883 - 1971)
Tanizaki Junichiro (1886 - 1965)
Akutagawa Ryunosuke (1892 - 1927)
Eiji Yoshikawa (1892-1962)
Kawabata Yasunari (1899 - 1972)
Dazai Osamu (1909 - 1948)
Endo Shusaku (1923 - 1996)
Abe Kobo (1924 - 1993)
Mishima Yukio (1925 - 1970)
Oe Kenzaburo (1935)
Murakami Haruki (1949)
Murakami Ryu (1952)
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