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Classical Japan
Historical
Overview
Literature
Overview
Lessons
Bibliography
(and sources for recommended student readings)

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Literature
Overview: A Look at
Heian Court Life
Lynne
K. Miyake
Pomona College
A. Unit
Overview/Lesson Context
1. The Heian
period (794-1185) is considered Japan's "Golden
age" in terms of literature and the arts in the sense that it,
much like 19th century Russian literature, is considered the period when
Japanese literature came into its own.
a. The period included a "break"
from with Chinese culture and the creation of a uniquely
"Japanese" culture.
b. Many scholars today are re-evaluating this
view. Many feel that during the 19th and 20th centuries, as part of
their effort to create a modern nation, the Japanese sought to carve
out their own sense of culture and identity as separate and unique
from China, Korea, and the rest of Asia. As part of this campaign
Japanese selected the Heian period as the pivotal moment when
"Japan became Japanese."
2. Nonetheless, it is clear that this period profoundly
influenced the rest of the next six centuries of Japanese
literature
a. The Heian period set the standards for
poetic diction, form, and subject matter, ways in which poetry was to
be produced and catalogued in imperial anthologies until the
appearance of renga
b. It set the tone for much of the prose in
the form of monogatari,
nikki, and even zuihitsu
until the Tokugawa period (1600-1867)
1) The subject matter was expanded to
include war and battle (e.g., Heike),
mappo concerns
(e.g., Hojoki)
2) Even in the new genres of noh,
and kabuki
and bunraku,
poetry from the period was quoted verbatim and its themes,
characters, and plots were utilized
c. Much of the intelligentsia carried a sense
of nostalgia for the glory days of the Heian and the imperial
court
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3. Legacy of "a highly aestheticized
celebration of courtly tastes (miyabi)
and emotional sensibilities" (Vernon, 1988) still in play
a. For example
1) Mono
no aware (the transience of things)
2) The love of cultivated
(refined/idealized) forms of nature rather than nature in the
raw
3) The stance of writing for an
in-group
b. As a case in point of the longevity of the
aesthetics of the period, The
Tale of Genji still captures the imagination of the literate
people and generation after generation have produced their own
"readings" of the tale
1) During the Tokugawa
period parodies reflecting "the lively and pragmatic, sometimes
ribald, sometimes sentimental materialism of popular fiction"
of the times (Vernon, 1988)--Santo Kyoden's , Ihara Saikaku's The
Life of an Amorous Man
2) Modern Japanese renditions-by poetess
Yosano Akiko, novelists Tanizaki Jun'ichiro (3 times), Enchi Foumiko,
essayist Tanabe Seiko, and, most recently, novelist and nun,
Setouchi Jakucho
3) English translations include three more
or less complete ones by Arthur Waley (1929-33), Edward
Seidensticker (1976) and, most recently, Royall
Tyler (2001)
4) There have been several movies, operas,
and even a New Music symphony
5) One must not forget either the
appearances of anime,
and several manga
renditions.
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4. Legacy of women's
writing
a. Although there were very special
circumstances that fostered writing by women, the Heian women writers
were among the earliest practitioners. They constitute a rare
commodity in world history, especially if we look at the case put
forth by Virginia Woolf
1) Woolf speaks for other writers as she
laments the lack of major women author's in early British literary
history
2) In Room of One's Own Woolf
"posits the existence of a Judith Shakespeare, sister of
William, whose genius was lost because her sex precluded her from
the development and exercise of it. Summing up her tale, Woolf
observes, 'any woman born with a great gift in the sixteenth century
would have certainly gone crazed, shot herself or ended her days in
some lonely cottage outside the village, half witch, half wizard,
feared and mocked at.'"
b. Due to the change in climate for woman in
the ensuing periods, most of their work has not been preserved but
women did write waka
poetry and a few nikki.
Some writings by peasant and merchant women are gradually come to the
fore as well. c. In the late 19th C women writers reemerge in the
public arena after a hiatus of three centuries and the Heian legacy
had both a positive and negative impact.
1) The positive -- unlike the situation for
women in 19th century Europe, there was no question that women could
write; after all a woman had written The Tale of Genji, one
of the greatest Japanese masterpieces.
2) The negative -- topics suitable for
women writers early on were more often than not limited to writing
about their own personal angst, emotional and physical.
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B. Suggested Lesson
Plans
1. General comments
about the period
a. The Heian aristocracy had a highly
developed sense of aesthetics
1) Highly stratified, circumscribed, and
limited in numbers
2) Producers, consumers, and subject matter
of almost all that was written during that period
b. Unprecedented role played by the arts,
including literature, in court life in terms of marriage/courtship and
even governance
1) Marriage politics
a) In its initial stages face to face
encounters between the sexes (e.g., dating) were not permitted, so
the way to woo a lover and get her attention was through
poetry
b) Beautiful calligraphy, the right
choice of paper suitable to season and emotional tenor of the
moment could do the trick
2) Governance
a) A true statesman who was suitable to
govern had to exhibit a mastery of the arts
b) Thus, poetic knowledge and the ability
to turn an appropriate verse at the appropriate moment were as
necessary to a Heian courtier as a present day politician's
oratory/public speaking skills
3) Production and consumption of literary
(and other artistic) products
a) Literacy-very limited in number
b) No strict division between readers and
writers-all had to be adept in poetry to some degree
c) Insiders writing for insiders, writers
writing for writers
d) Thus, produced very short forms which
in fact had layers of meaning (e.g., an image of a bird could
represent the poet, his addressee, a bird from several other poems
in the poetic and prose tradition)
c. Unprecedented role of women in the arts,
especially literature
1) Unusual in the world in this
respect.
2) This did not happen because men thought
highly of the women, but because of the realities of the marriage
politics of the time.
3) Reflected in part by a division of
Chinese/kanbun writing,
largely the domain of men, while the women were relegated to the
vernacular Japanese/kana writing, This is not a strict division in
that men also wrote in kana and that many of leading women writers
of the period like Murasaki Shikibu (c. 1000) seem to have had first
hand knowledge of Chinese kanbun writing.
d. Characteristics of the literature of the
period
1) Highly aristocratic-only poetry and
stories about the court; none about the common people.
2) Written for an in-group so long
explanations were not necessary.
a) A word or image would speak volumes
as, say, the Statue of Liberty as the symbol of freedom, the
emblem of the United States as an immigrant nation, etc.
Non-proper nouns such as birds and flowers would serve similar
functions
b) Thus, the forms tended to be
short-31-syllable waka, even
The Tale of Genji
can be considered a collection of vignettes.
3) No strict division between poetry and
prose and no drama of any kind.
4) Highly aesthetic in inception with
natural images and the seasons playing prominent roles.
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2. Objectives
[see also the California
and World History standards]
a. Students will demonstrate knowledge of the
fact that the literature of the Heian period was highly aristocratic
in form, content, and inception and limited to a very small number of
practitioners.
b. For this reason, literary works were
written for an in-group by an in-group and, as a result, the pressures
to conform and belong were extremely powerful.
c. Literary forms also tended to be short --
but the interplay of natural imagery with courtship, politics, and the
poetic and prose tradition added depth and fullness.
d. Students should note that women played
prominent roles, not only as subject matter but also as producers and
consumers of literary works at a time when in most places literary
society was dominated by men.
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3. Materials
a. "Yugao" from The Tale of Genji
(recommended: Royall Tyler translation)
b. Excerpt from the bilingual version of Asaki
yume mishi (manga on Genji) (last 30 pages) or the "Yugao"
chapter from Tusboi Koh's The Illustrated Tale of Genji
(English version, pp. 38-49)
c. Excerpts from Ivan Morris's The Pillow
Book of Sei Shonagon (2 volume edition)
1) #1 "Opening" (p. 1)
2) #148 "Adorable Things" (pp.
156-7)
3) #44 Elegant Things" (p. 149)
4) #27 "Hateful Things" (pp.
25-30)
5) #29 "Things that make One's Heart
Beat Faster" (p. 31)
6) Second half of #83 Snow Mountain episode
(pp. 83-90)
d. Poetry (recommended: Rodd's Kokinshu
& Carter's Traditional Japanese Poetry)
1) Kokinshu anthology sequence (Rodd)
2) Select sequence of poems by Ariwara no
Narihira, (Carter, pp. 76-77), Ono no Komachi (pp. 82-87),
e. "The Lady Who Loved Insects"
(from Donald Keene, Anthology of Japanese Literature)
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4. Activities
a. Utilizing what you have gotten from the
readings, draw what you imagine a typical court lady and male courtier
would look like, paying close attention to the material culture of
their clothing, accessories in the home, food, etc. See what you can
reconstruct in terms of their physical features. What colors do you
visualize in the faces, clothing, surroundings? Or do you see
everything as black and white?
b. Write an autobiography from the point of
view of a court lady or man "who does not belong," who is an
outsider in a closed society where belonging in the in-group is
everything.
c. Have students make lists a la Pillow Book
about what they find hateful or adorable or fearful.
d. Have students draw their own manga
versions of "The Lady Who Loved Insects" or The Pillow
Book's "Snow Mountain" episode.
e. Write a sequence of poems in waka
style (five lines consisting of very short lines, describing the
steady progression of a season, a love affair or romance, growing up
aging, etc.). Remember that for love poetry, it is the pining for an
unrequited love or a love that is over that is the literary key and
that the descriptions of the seasons tend to be finely wrought and
aestheticized.
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