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The Journal of Socho / translated and annotated by H. Mack Horton.

De Gruyter Stanford University Press Backlist eBook-Package 2000-2013 Available online

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EBSCOhost Academic eBook Collection (North America) Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Sōchō, 1448-1532.
Contributor:
Horton, H. Mack.
Standardized Title:
Sōchō shuki. English
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Sōchō, 1448-1532--Diaries.
Sōchō.
Poets, Japanese--1185-1600--Diaries.
Poets, Japanese.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (383 p.)
Place of Publication:
Stanford, Calif. : Stanford University Press, c2002.
Language Note:
English
Summary:
The Journal of Socho is one of the most individual self-portraits in the literary history of medieval Japan. Its author, Saiokuken Socho (1448-1532)—the preeminent linked-verse (renga) poet of his time—was an eyewitness to Japan's violent transition from the medieval to the early modern age. Written between 1522 and 1527, during the Age of the Country at War (Sengoku jidai), his journal provides a vivid portrayal of cultural life in the capital and in the provinces, together with descriptions of battles and great warrior families, the dangers of travel through war-torn countryside, and the plight of the poor. The journal records four of Socho's journeys between Kyoto and Suruga Province, where he served as the poet laureate of the Imagawa house, as well as several shorter excursions and periods of rest at various hermitages. The diverse upbringing of its author—a companion of nobles and warlords, a student of the orthodox poetic neoclassicism of the renga master Sogi, and a devotee of the iconoclastic Zen prelate Ikkyu—afforded him rich insights into the cultural life of the period. The Journal of Socho is remarkable for its breadth and freshness of observation, whether of the activities of literary men and the affairs of great courtiers and daimyo or of the daily lives of local warriors and commoners. This variety of cultural detail is matched by the journal's wealth of prose genres: travel diary, eremitic writing, historical chronicle, conversation, and correspondence. In addition, Socho has given us more than 600 verses that together illustrate most of the principal poetic genres of the time: renga, waka, choka, wakan renku, and comic or unorthodox haikai verses.
Contents:
Frontmatter
Contents
Abbreviations
Eras and Reigns During Sōchō’s Lifetime (1448-1532)
A Note to the Translation
Maps
Book One
Second Year of Daiei (1522)
Third Year of Daiei (1523)
Fourth Year of Daiei (1524)
Fifth Year of Daiei (1525)
Sixth Year of Daiei (1526)
Book Two
Seventh Year of Daiei (1527)
Appendixes
A:The Imagawa House
B: The Historical Context of the ‘‘Asahina Battle Chronicle’’
C: Chronology of ‘The Journal of Sōchō’
Notes
Bibliography
Index of First Lines
General Index
Notes:
Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph
Includes bibliographical references (p. [317]-334) and indexes.
ISBN:
0-8047-8024-2
0-585-45786-7
OCLC:
70722761

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