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Love, Poetry and Renunciation: Changing Configurations of the Ideal of Suki*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 September 2009

Extract

Anyone familiar with classical Japanese literature cannot but be struck by the rich array of terms such as mono no aware, yugen, wabi and sabi, to mention just a few, which are regarded as being central to the understanding of Japanese artistic theory and practice. These categories were not, of course, essentialist and unchanging. They were dynamic concepts which were subject to major transformations. These transformations illuminate important aspects of Japan's cultural history.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Asiatic Society 1995

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Footnotes

*

This article has been awarded the Major Barwis-Holliday Award for Far Eastern Studies for 1995.

References

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2 Ōno Susumu has suggested that suki in the Heian period was quite close in meaning to the modern Japanese word suki. It signified an unbridled flow of emotions towards a particular object or person and reflected a sense of pure enjoyment which was free of moral constraints. See Susumu, Ōno, “Ōchō bungaku no kotoba”, Nihon bungaku kenkyū (Tokyo), pp. 50–1.Google Scholar

3 See Jin'ichi, Konishi, “Fūryū: an ideal of Japanese esthetic life”, Orient West, VII, no 7 (1962), pp. 1116Google Scholar. Konishi has pointed out that by concentrating on the purely lexical meaning of the term, scholars have often failed to grasp the cultural world within which this ideal took root. He has examined the poetry of the T'ang period with particular reference to the technique of parallelisms to understand the context in which feng liu was used. He suggests that four terms - liquor, poetry, woman and zither were constantly associated with feng liu. See also Harries, Phillip, “Fūryū, a concept of elegance in pre-modern literature”, in Europe Interprets Japan, ed. Daniels, Gordon (Kent, 1984)Google Scholar.

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20 GM, ii, p. 23; trans, in EGS, TG, pp. 164–5.

21 GM, iv, p. 203; Cf. Seidensticker's translation, TG, p. 609.

22 GM, ii, p. 23; trans, in EGS, TG, p. 256.

23 Waley, Arthur, TG, p. 266Google Scholar; EGS, TG, p. 256.

24 GM, ii, p. 233; trans, in EGS, TG, p. 256.

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30 The Ten Worlds refers to the world of hell and the nine realms - of hungry ghosts, animals, asuras, humans, celestial beings, Arhats, the Self-Enlightened, the bodhisattvas and the Buddhas.

31 For detailed studies of twelfth and thirteenth century bakufu rule see Mass, Jeffrey P., Warrior Government in Early Medieval Japan (New Haven and London, 1974)Google Scholar and Minoru, Shinoda, The Founding of the Kamakura Shogunate (New York, 1960).Google Scholar

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