Rather than resist the vast social and cultural changes sweeping Japan in the nineteenth century, the poet Masaoka Shiki (1867?1902) incorporated new Western influences into his country's native haiku and tanka verse. By reinvigorating these...
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Rather than resist the vast social and cultural changes sweeping Japan in the nineteenth century, the poet Masaoka Shiki (1867?1902) incorporated new Western influences into his country's native haiku and tanka verse. By reinvigorating these traditional forms, Shiki freed them from outdated conventions and made them more responsive to newer trends in artistic expression. Altogether, his reforms made the haiku Japan's most influential modern cultural export.Based on extensive readings of Shiki's own writings and accounts of the poet by his contemporaries and family, Donald Keene ch
Contents; Introduction; 1. The Early Years; 2. Student Days; 3. The Song of the Hototogisu; 4. Shiki the Novelist; 5. Cathay and the Way Thither; 6. Sketches from Life; 7. Hototogisu; 8. Shiki and the Tanka; 9. Shintaishi and Kanshi; 10. Random Essays (Zuihitsu), 1; 11. Random Essays, 2; 12. The Last Days; Notes; Bibliography; Index