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One of the most spectacular vendettas ever: the history and haiku behind the mass-suicide featured in the 2013 film 47 Ronin.
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One of the most spectacular vendettas ever: the history and haiku behind the mass-suicide featured in the 2013 film 47 Ronin.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Stone Bridge Press
- Seitenzahl: 280
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. November 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 216mm x 152mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 345g
- ISBN-13: 9781611720549
- ISBN-10: 1611720540
- Artikelnr.: 55186190
- Verlag: Stone Bridge Press
- Seitenzahl: 280
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. November 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 216mm x 152mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 345g
- ISBN-13: 9781611720549
- ISBN-10: 1611720540
- Artikelnr.: 55186190
Hiroaki Sato is a prolific, award-winning writer of books on Japanese history and literature, and a translator of classical and modern Japanese poetry into English. American poet Gary Snyder has called Sato "perhaps the finest translator of contemporary Japanese poetry into American English." He is the author of the classic works Legends of the Samurai. and The Sword and the Mind His reviews and articles have appeared in The Philadelphia Inquirer, The New York Times Book Review, AsiaWeek, Mainichi Daily News, St. Andrews Review, Journal of the Association of Teachers of Japanese, The Journal of American and Canadian Studies, Comparative Literature Studies, The Japan Times, The Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies, The Journal of Japanese Studies, Modern Haiku, Japan Focus, and others. He recently received the 2017-2018 Japan-U.S. Friendship Commission Translation Prize for Silver Spoon (Stone Bridge Press).
Contents
Introduction
Part I: Grudge and Vendetta (12,500 words)
* The Country Is “Full of Light”
* Shogun Tsunayoshi and Genroku Era
* “Pitying the Sentient” Edicts
* A Haiku Scholar’s Take
* Titles and Number of Participants
* Asano Attacks Kira
* Why Did Asano Want to Kill Kira?
* Neither a Daimyo Nor a Samurai
* Dramatic Elements
* Seppuku
* The Treatment of Avengers
* Camouflage
Part II: Leader Ōishi Kuranosuke and His Men (19,400 words)
* Escheatment
* The First Ninja’s Report
* We Are All Hicks
* Another Ninja’s Report
* The Disagreements
* Onodera Jūnai’s Letters
* Failure to Commit Seppuku Mocked
* Restoring the Asano House
* The “Radicals”
* Kuranosuke Responds
* Kuranosuke’s Appearance
* Sword Fights and Killings
* Uncertain Samurai Life
* Kuranosuke Indulges in Gay Quarters
* A House of Sorrow
* Did Kuranosuke Really Drown in “Wine and Flesh”?
* The Way of the Samurai
* Kuranosuke’s Last Letters
Chapter III: Poetic Connections
* Gengo’s Travelogue: Going Down the Tōkaidō Road in a Daimyo
Procession
* Gengo’s Haikai Teacher Sentoku’s Opinion: Was the Lord President of
Akō Stingy?
* Gengo Pays Respects to Bashō’s Grave
* 1697: Another Ill Effect of “Pitying the Sentient”
* Gengo’s Haikai Anthology and Kayano Sanpei’s Suicide
* A Mysterious Tale about a Mysterious Birth
* How Ōtaka Shiyō Made Use of Haikai Man Teisa
* Gengo’s Encounter with Haikai Master Kikaku the Day before the
Vendetta
* Kikaku’s Letter on the Night of the Raid
* A Real Kikaku Letter?
* The Great Fire, Asano Naganao, the Firefighters’ Uniform
* The Announcement, the Raid, and its Aftermath
* Extracts from the First Full Account of the Forty-Seven Samurai
* Ōtaka Gengo’s Farewell-to-the-World Verse
* Sentoku’s Other Students
* Another Story about Teisa and Akō Men
* A Spearman Had to Drop Out
IV: An Akutagawa Story
Bibliography
Index
Introduction
Part I: Grudge and Vendetta (12,500 words)
* The Country Is “Full of Light”
* Shogun Tsunayoshi and Genroku Era
* “Pitying the Sentient” Edicts
* A Haiku Scholar’s Take
* Titles and Number of Participants
* Asano Attacks Kira
* Why Did Asano Want to Kill Kira?
* Neither a Daimyo Nor a Samurai
* Dramatic Elements
* Seppuku
* The Treatment of Avengers
* Camouflage
Part II: Leader Ōishi Kuranosuke and His Men (19,400 words)
* Escheatment
* The First Ninja’s Report
* We Are All Hicks
* Another Ninja’s Report
* The Disagreements
* Onodera Jūnai’s Letters
* Failure to Commit Seppuku Mocked
* Restoring the Asano House
* The “Radicals”
* Kuranosuke Responds
* Kuranosuke’s Appearance
* Sword Fights and Killings
* Uncertain Samurai Life
* Kuranosuke Indulges in Gay Quarters
* A House of Sorrow
* Did Kuranosuke Really Drown in “Wine and Flesh”?
* The Way of the Samurai
* Kuranosuke’s Last Letters
Chapter III: Poetic Connections
* Gengo’s Travelogue: Going Down the Tōkaidō Road in a Daimyo
Procession
* Gengo’s Haikai Teacher Sentoku’s Opinion: Was the Lord President of
Akō Stingy?
* Gengo Pays Respects to Bashō’s Grave
* 1697: Another Ill Effect of “Pitying the Sentient”
* Gengo’s Haikai Anthology and Kayano Sanpei’s Suicide
* A Mysterious Tale about a Mysterious Birth
* How Ōtaka Shiyō Made Use of Haikai Man Teisa
* Gengo’s Encounter with Haikai Master Kikaku the Day before the
Vendetta
* Kikaku’s Letter on the Night of the Raid
* A Real Kikaku Letter?
* The Great Fire, Asano Naganao, the Firefighters’ Uniform
* The Announcement, the Raid, and its Aftermath
* Extracts from the First Full Account of the Forty-Seven Samurai
* Ōtaka Gengo’s Farewell-to-the-World Verse
* Sentoku’s Other Students
* Another Story about Teisa and Akō Men
* A Spearman Had to Drop Out
IV: An Akutagawa Story
Bibliography
Index
Contents
Introduction
Part I: Grudge and Vendetta (12,500 words)
* The Country Is “Full of Light”
* Shogun Tsunayoshi and Genroku Era
* “Pitying the Sentient” Edicts
* A Haiku Scholar’s Take
* Titles and Number of Participants
* Asano Attacks Kira
* Why Did Asano Want to Kill Kira?
* Neither a Daimyo Nor a Samurai
* Dramatic Elements
* Seppuku
* The Treatment of Avengers
* Camouflage
Part II: Leader Ōishi Kuranosuke and His Men (19,400 words)
* Escheatment
* The First Ninja’s Report
* We Are All Hicks
* Another Ninja’s Report
* The Disagreements
* Onodera Jūnai’s Letters
* Failure to Commit Seppuku Mocked
* Restoring the Asano House
* The “Radicals”
* Kuranosuke Responds
* Kuranosuke’s Appearance
* Sword Fights and Killings
* Uncertain Samurai Life
* Kuranosuke Indulges in Gay Quarters
* A House of Sorrow
* Did Kuranosuke Really Drown in “Wine and Flesh”?
* The Way of the Samurai
* Kuranosuke’s Last Letters
Chapter III: Poetic Connections
* Gengo’s Travelogue: Going Down the Tōkaidō Road in a Daimyo
Procession
* Gengo’s Haikai Teacher Sentoku’s Opinion: Was the Lord President of
Akō Stingy?
* Gengo Pays Respects to Bashō’s Grave
* 1697: Another Ill Effect of “Pitying the Sentient”
* Gengo’s Haikai Anthology and Kayano Sanpei’s Suicide
* A Mysterious Tale about a Mysterious Birth
* How Ōtaka Shiyō Made Use of Haikai Man Teisa
* Gengo’s Encounter with Haikai Master Kikaku the Day before the
Vendetta
* Kikaku’s Letter on the Night of the Raid
* A Real Kikaku Letter?
* The Great Fire, Asano Naganao, the Firefighters’ Uniform
* The Announcement, the Raid, and its Aftermath
* Extracts from the First Full Account of the Forty-Seven Samurai
* Ōtaka Gengo’s Farewell-to-the-World Verse
* Sentoku’s Other Students
* Another Story about Teisa and Akō Men
* A Spearman Had to Drop Out
IV: An Akutagawa Story
Bibliography
Index
Introduction
Part I: Grudge and Vendetta (12,500 words)
* The Country Is “Full of Light”
* Shogun Tsunayoshi and Genroku Era
* “Pitying the Sentient” Edicts
* A Haiku Scholar’s Take
* Titles and Number of Participants
* Asano Attacks Kira
* Why Did Asano Want to Kill Kira?
* Neither a Daimyo Nor a Samurai
* Dramatic Elements
* Seppuku
* The Treatment of Avengers
* Camouflage
Part II: Leader Ōishi Kuranosuke and His Men (19,400 words)
* Escheatment
* The First Ninja’s Report
* We Are All Hicks
* Another Ninja’s Report
* The Disagreements
* Onodera Jūnai’s Letters
* Failure to Commit Seppuku Mocked
* Restoring the Asano House
* The “Radicals”
* Kuranosuke Responds
* Kuranosuke’s Appearance
* Sword Fights and Killings
* Uncertain Samurai Life
* Kuranosuke Indulges in Gay Quarters
* A House of Sorrow
* Did Kuranosuke Really Drown in “Wine and Flesh”?
* The Way of the Samurai
* Kuranosuke’s Last Letters
Chapter III: Poetic Connections
* Gengo’s Travelogue: Going Down the Tōkaidō Road in a Daimyo
Procession
* Gengo’s Haikai Teacher Sentoku’s Opinion: Was the Lord President of
Akō Stingy?
* Gengo Pays Respects to Bashō’s Grave
* 1697: Another Ill Effect of “Pitying the Sentient”
* Gengo’s Haikai Anthology and Kayano Sanpei’s Suicide
* A Mysterious Tale about a Mysterious Birth
* How Ōtaka Shiyō Made Use of Haikai Man Teisa
* Gengo’s Encounter with Haikai Master Kikaku the Day before the
Vendetta
* Kikaku’s Letter on the Night of the Raid
* A Real Kikaku Letter?
* The Great Fire, Asano Naganao, the Firefighters’ Uniform
* The Announcement, the Raid, and its Aftermath
* Extracts from the First Full Account of the Forty-Seven Samurai
* Ōtaka Gengo’s Farewell-to-the-World Verse
* Sentoku’s Other Students
* Another Story about Teisa and Akō Men
* A Spearman Had to Drop Out
IV: An Akutagawa Story
Bibliography
Index