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Japanese Women in Tanka Poetry

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Title: Japanese Women in Tanka Poetry


1
Japanese Women
in
Tanka Poetry
Hisashi Nakamura Ria Ulleri
Anglo-Japanese Tanka Society
2
What is Tanka?Empress Iwa no Hime
(d.347)Ono no Komachi (ca. 850)Izumi
Shikibu (ca. 970 - 1030)Princess Shikishi
(1149 - 1201)

3
Tanka ? ? Short Poem
5 7 5 7
5 7 5 7 7 syllabic units
4
  • The far meeting point
  • Of the sea and the pale sky
  • Trembles in the haze.
  • The warm sleeping dunes exhale
  • The remains of summer.

5
  • Stifled by the air
  • Laden with the rusty dust
  • Of the passing years
  • The dead cranes in the shipyard
  • Idly dangle their cables.

6
Year No. of poems First Anthology
after 759 4,500
1st Imperial Anthology 905
1,111 8th Imperial Anthology 1205
1,978
7
Influence of Tanka
  • No Theatre
  • The Tea Ceremony
  • Ceramic Art
  • Haiku
  • British American Imagist Poets

8
Yugen
  • Subtle and profound atmosphere
  • Infinite tranquil space with lingering
    suggestiveness
  • Avoiding detailed description

9
Monk Saigyo (1118 1190)
  • Even a body without a heart
  • Can feel this sad beauty
  • Snipe take wing from the marsh
  • In the autumn dusk.

10
Monk Jakuren (1139? 1202)
  • Cormorant fishing
  • Maybe they are poling
  • Through the shallows.
  • Swinging and tangling
  • The brazier flares.

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No Theatre
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The Traditional Sense of Beauty
  • Cherry Blossoms
  • Crimson Leaves

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Golden Tea Room (Hideyoshi 1537 1598)
20
  • As far as one can see,
  • No cherry blossoms
  • Or crimson leaves-
  • A thatched hut by a bay
  • In the autumn dusk.

Fujiwara no Teika (1162 1241)
21
The Tea Ceremony
  • Less is More

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Tea Bowl
24
A bamboo vase for one flower
25
Empress Iwa no Hime
  • Wife of Emperor Nintoku
  • Proclaimed Empress 314 AD
  • Left Emperor Nintoku 342 AD
  • Died 347 AD

26
Burial Place of Empress Iwa no Hime
27
Burial place of Iwa no Hime
28
Burial place of Emperor Nintoku
29
Burial place of Emperor Nintoku
30
Exchanges of Poemsin January 334 AD
  • Empress Iwa no Hime
  • Emperor Nintoku

31
Emperor Nintoku
  • On my oath as a noble
  • Id like to place
  • A spare alongside
  • In case my bowstring should snap.

32
Empress Iwa no Hime
  • If it were clothes
  • It would be fine
  • To put on one over another.
  • But your idea is terrifying
  • Of laying futon side by side.

33
  • Four Famous Tanka Poems
  • By
  • Empress Iwa no Hime

34
  • My Lord has departed
  • And the days have passed.
  • Shall I search the mountains,
  • Going forth to meet him,
  • Or wait and wait for him?

35
  • No! I would not live,
  • Longing for you.
  • Rather, high on the mountain,
  • A rock for my pillow,
  • I prefer to die.

36
  • Just as I am
  • I shall wait for my lord
  • Till on my black hair,
  • Trailing unconfined,
  • The frost shall fall.

37
  • As the morning mist trails
  • Over the ears of rice
  • In the autumn field,
  • I know not when or where
  • My love will clear away.

38
21 September 342
  • While Empress Iwa no Hime was away
  • Emperor Nintoku brought Princess Yata
  • into the palace as his consort.
  • Empress Iwa no Hime left Emperor Nintoku in 342.
  • She died in 347.
  • Princess Yata became the Empress.

39
Empress Iwa no Hime
  • A jealous woman?
  • A woman of pride?

40
Ono no Komachi ( ca. 850 )
41
Komachi
42
  • Was it because I went to sleep
  • Thinking always of him
  • That I caught a glimpse of him?
  • Had I known it a dream
  • I would not have awoken.

43
  • When I cannot meet him
  • On a moonless night
  • Passion rises within me
  • A flame running through my breast
  • Sets my heart on fire.

44
  • Without showing a change in colour
  • The thing that fades
  • In this world
  • Is the flower
  • Called the human heart.

45
  • The colour of the cherry blossom
  • Has faded vainly
  • In the long rain
  • While in idle thoughts
  • I have spent my life.

46
  • Alas!
  • How sad to think
  • That my body will end in pale green
  • After all,
  • A mist over the fields.

47
Smoke by Catherine ScrivenYork St John
University College
  • Alas!
  • How sad to think
  • That my body will end in pale green
  • After all,
  • A mist over the fields.

  • Ono no Komachi

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56
Gender Formation in PoetryThe First Imperial
Anthology 905
  • Some flowering plants were indirectly compared to
    women
  • Only male poets wrote poems which included these
    plants

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62
The Image of Komachi in the First Imperial
Anthology
  • Beautiful
  • Pitiable
  • Not strong
  • Like a noble lady who is suffering from a
    sickness

63
Komachi
  • The first female image created by male poets as
    part of the gender formation in Japanese poetry.

64
Akita
Akita
Tokyo
65
Komachi Festival
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70
Komachi
71
Izumi Shikibu ( ca. 970 1030 )
72
Izumi Shikibu
  • one of the ladies-in-waiting of Empress Akiko
  • notorious for her love affairs
  • the author of The Diary of Izumi Shikibu
  • considered to be the finest poet of the time

73
  • First marriage First child
  • An affair with Prince Tametaka starts
  • June 1002 Prince Tametaka dies at the age of 26
  • April 1003 An affair with Prince Atsumichi
    starts
  • 1007 Prince Atsumichi dies at the age of 27
  • Writes the Diary of Izumi Shikibu
  • Second marriage
  • Loss of her first child

74
The Diary of Izumi Shikibu
  • based on her affair with Prince Atsumichi between
    April 1003 and January 1004
  • depicts
  • the inner solitude and aching void
  • of a female heart

75
  • Without a thought
  • For my black hairs disarray
  • I throw myself down,
  • Already longing for the one
  • Who ran his fingers through it.

76
  • Since even my pillow does not know,
  • I shall not speak.
  • Tell no one
  • What you truly saw-
  • A spring nights dream.

77
  • On the bamboo leaves
  • A fine ice fall
  • Patters and patters.
  • How bitter
  • To try to sleep alone!

78
  • From one dark path
  • Into another
  • Again I may stray.
  • Light the long way,
  • Moon on the mountain rim.

79
  • In the evening,
  • Just glimpsing the lonely clouds,
  • The feeling rises in me
  • Never to gaze
  • For too long.

80
  • Tormented by my thoughts
  • My soul struggles
  • And escapes
  • A firefly
  • Over the marsh.

81
  • Although Ive heard
  • The dead return tonight,
  • You are not here.
  • Is the place where I live
  • A homeland without a soul?

82
  • In my loneliness,
  • Not to let even the smoke die down
  • I break twigs
  • And feed the flames
  • In this winter mountain home.

83
Laura Morgan York St John University College
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89
Izumi Shikibu
  • A highly professional career woman
  • Respected by both men and women as the finest
    poet of the time
  • Taken into Empress Akikos confidence

90
Izumi Shikibu
Life
Tanka
Love
To write
91
Princess Shikishi 1149 - 1201
Art Work Susan Kruse York St John
92
Princess Shikishi1149 - 1201
  • A daughter of Emperor Goshirakawa
  • Sent to Kamo Shrine in Kyoto to serve as a
    virgin, consecrated for 10 years till she was 21
    years old
  • Remained unmarried all though her life
  • Became a nun in 1190
  • Died at the age of 53

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Political Social Background
  • Princess Shikishi was born in 1149
  • 1156 Civil War
  • 1159 Civil War
  • 1192 Samurai Government was established
  • Princess Shikishi died in 1201

98
The Transient Nature of Human Existence
  • Civil wars
  • Earthquakes
  • Huge fires
  • Devastating storms
  • Starvation

99
Beating ClothesClothes were made soft or shiny
by beating them on a wooden or stone block.
100
Boxwood PillowBoxwood was often used to make a
support on which a small pillow was placed
101
Cord of my soul
  • It was believed that a cord tied the soul
  • to the body.
  • Therefore, cord of my soul in effect
  • means life itself since the separation of
  • the soul and body means death.

102
The long nights sleep
  • In Buddhist teaching
  • the long nights sleep
  • is the same as
  • the long nights darkness
  • which is a spiritual darkness caused by
    earthly desires.

103
Deep in the mountains The pine branch door Does
not feel the coming of spring Only the slow
dropping of gems From the melting snow.
104
  • From somewhere in the clouds,
  • A voice-
  • The cuckoo is sobbing.
  • Are his tears still falling?
  • A passing shower in the early evening.

105
  • The night has worn away.
  • The clear moon shines cold
  • Near the mountain edge.
  • And faintly from the far village of Toochi,
  • Someone beating clothes.

106
  • As the wind blows cold
  • Leafy shadows clear up
  • Night by night.
  • There is no corner left unlit
  • The moonlight in the garden.

107
  • When this day
  • Spent gazing at your blossoms
  • Is long past,
  • You, at least, do not forget me,
  • Plum tree by the eaves.

108
  • Of this love of mine
  • Theres not one who knows.
  • Do not let my pent up tears overflow
  • As I lie here,
  • My dear boxwood pillow.

109
  • Guide me over
  • As I row my boat,
  • Not knowing where I am bound,
  • For there is no wake to follow,
  • Breeze on the boundless ocean.

110
  • Forgetting that the days are passing
  • With my heart concealed,
  • Unaware, I sigh
  • As the night falls.

111
  • Cord of my soul!
  • If you must break, break now.
  • For if I live on
  • My power to keep this hidden
  • May not endure.

112
  • I know I cannot live
  • Until tomorrow
  • Grieving that you are cold-hearted.
  • If you come, let it be
  • Before this night falls.

113
  • The crowing of the rooster at dawn
  • Pierces me to the heart,
  • Here on my pillow,
  • Heavy with thoughts
  • Of the long nights sleep.

114
  • Looking afar
  • In the stillness of each dawn
  • I am filled with sadness
  • That the world has not awoken
  • From the long nights sleep.

115
Broken by the sound of the breeze That plays on
the bamboo leaves Near the window, A dream even
shorter Than my fleeting sleep.
116
The TempestShakespeare 1611
  • We are such stuff as dreams are made on,
  • And our little life is rounded with a sleep.

117
Anglo-Japanese Tanka Society
http//www.tankasociety.com
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