Imakagami
The Imakagami (
Date and authorship
It has been speculated that the work was compiled in[3] or shortly after 1170;[2][4] Donald Keene, citing Isao Takehana, stated that the work was probably written between the eighth month of 1174 and the seventh month of 1175.[5] The author is uncertain,[3][4] but the most likely candidate is the waka poet Fujiwara no Tametsune (
Structure and style
The text is in ten volumes,[2][3][4] and is told from the point of view of an elderly woman who is described as a granddaughter of Ōyake no Yotsugi (
The work contains 140 waka and countless references to Japanese and Chinese literature.[8]
Content
The work begins with a group of pilgrims visiting the temples of Yamato Province being approached by an elderly woman who, when asked if she lives in the region, says that she lived in the Capital for one hundred years and then in Yamashiro Province for another fifty, before moving to Yamato.[9] The listeners are astonished at her great age, but she humbly replies by listing several others in China and Japan who had supposedly lived to great age, including her grandfather Yotsugi.[9] She says her name is Ayame (iris), which was given to her because of her birth on the fifth day of the fifth month, the same day as the Iris Festival (
The rest of the work describes the old lady's recollections of the past.[9] It describes the period of roughly 150 years[3] from 1025 to 1170.[1][2][4] and is primarily focused[2] on an account of the imperial family and the Fujiwara and Murakami-Genji clans.[2][3]
Relationship to other works
The work is classified as one of the four "mirrors" of history along with the Ōkagami, Mizukagami and Masukagami.[2][4][11][12] It is considered to be a direct continuation of the Ōkagami.[1]
Although it was written during the period of rule by the Taira military clan (Japanese Wikipedia article), its focus is on waka poetry and the affairs of nobles at court.[3]
See also
References
- ^ a b c Keene 1999 : 559.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Britannica Kokusai Dai-hyakkajiten article "Imakagami". 2007. Britannica Japan Co.
- ^ a b c d e f g h MyPedia article "Imakagami". 2007. Hitachi Systems & Services.
- ^ a b c d e f g Digital Daijisen entry "Imakagami". Shogakukan.
- ^ Keene 1999 : 559, citing (566, note 28) Takehana 1984 : 620 (Vol. 3).
- ^ Keene 1999 : 559, citing (566, note 29) Takehana 1984 : 620-622 (Vol. 3) and Matsumura 1979 : 156-161.
- ^ Keene 1999 : 560, citing (566, note 30) Takehana 1984 : 42 (Vol. 1).
- ^ Keene 1999 : 560, citing (566, note 32) Matsumura 1979 : 168-180.
- ^ a b c Keene 1999 : 560.
- ^ Keene 1999 : 560, citing (566, note 31) Takehana 1984 : 38-39 (Vol. 1).
- ^ Keene 1999 : 564.
- ^ Nishizawa "Rekishi-monogatari" IN Nishizawa (ed.) 2002 : 249.
Bibliography
- Keene, Donald (1999). A History of Japanese Literature, Vol. 1: Seeds in the Heart — Japanese Literature from Earliest Times to the Late Sixteenth Century. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-11441-7.
- Matsumura, Hiroji (1979). Rekishi Monogatari. Tokyo: Hanawa Shobō. ISBN 978-4-827-33016-8.
- Nishizawa, Masashi (2002). Koten Bungaku o Yomu tame no Yōgo Jiten. Tokyo: Tōkyō-dō Shuppan. ISBN 4-490-10600-9.
- Takehana, Isao (1984). Imakagami (3 vols.). Tokyo: Kōdansha. ISBN 978-4-061-58329-0.
External links
- Full text at Nihon Bungaku Denshi Toshokan.
- Scanned copy of full text available from the National Institute of Japanese Literature.