Classical literature: Heian period (794–1185)

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The foundation of the city of Heian-kyō (later known as Kyōto) as the capital of Japan marked the beginning of a period of great literary brilliance. The earliest writings of the period, however, were almost all in Chinese because of the continued desire to emulate the culture of the continent. Three imperially sponsored anthologies of Chinese poetry appeared between 814 and 827, and it seemed for a time that writing in Japanese would be relegated to an extremely minor position. The most distinguished writer of Chinese verse, the 9th-century poet Sugawara Michizane, gave a final lustre to this period of Chinese learning by his erudition and poetic gifts, but his refusal to go to China when offered the post of ambassador, on the grounds that China no longer had anything to teach Japan, marked a turning point in the response to Chinese influence.

Poetry

The invention of the kana phonetic syllabary, traditionally attributed to the celebrated 9th-century Shingon priest and Sanskrit scholar Kūkai, enormously facilitated writing in Japanese. Private collections of poetry in kana began to be compiled about 880, and in 905 the Kokinshū (A Collection of Poems Ancient and Modern), the first major work of kana literature, was compiled by the poet Ki Tsurayuki and others. This anthology contains 1,111 poems divided into 20 books arranged by topics, including 6 books of seasonal poems, 5 books of love poems, and single books devoted to such subjects as travel, mourning, and congratulations. The two prefaces are clearly indebted to the theories of poetry described by the compilers of such Chinese anthologies as the Shijing (“Classic of Poetry”) and Wen xuan (“Selections of Refined Literature”), but the preferences they express would be shared by most tanka poets for the next 1,000 years. The preface by Tsurayuki, the oldest work of sustained prose in kana, enumerated the circumstances that move men to write poetry; he believed that melancholy, whether aroused by a change in the seasons or by a glimpse of white hairs reflected in a mirror, provided a more congenial mood for writing poetry than the harsher emotions treated in the earlier, pre-kana anthology Man’yōshū. The best tanka in the Kokinshū captivate the reader by their perceptivity and tonal beauty, but these flawlessly turned miniatures lack the variety of the Man’yōshū.

Skill in composing tanka became an asset in gaining preference at court; it was also essential to a lover, whose messages to his mistress (who presumably could not read Chinese, still the language employed by men in official documents) often consisted of poems describing his own emotions or begging her favours. In this period the tanka almost completely ousted the chōka, the length of which was indefinite, because the shorter tanka were more suited to the lover’s billet-doux or to competitions on prescribed themes.

For the poets of the Kokinshū and the later court anthologies, originality was less desirable than perfection of language and tone. The critics, far from praising novelty of effects, condemned deviation from the standard poetic diction—which was established by the Kokinshū and consisted of some 2,000 words—and insisted on absolute adherence to the poetic codes first formulated in the 10th century. Although these restrictions saved Japanese poetry from lapses into bad taste or vulgarity, they froze it for centuries in prescribed modes of expression. Only a skilled critic can distinguish a typical tanka of the 10th century from one of the 18th century. The Kokinshū set the precedent for later court anthologies, and a knowledge of its contents was indispensable to all poets as a guide and source of literary allusions.

Love poetry occupies a prominent place in the Kokinshū, but the joys of love are seldom celebrated; instead, the poets write in the melancholy vein prescribed in the preface, describing the uncertainties before a meeting with the beloved, the pain of parting, or the sad realization that an affair has ended. The invariable perfection of diction, unmarred by any indecorous cry from the heart, may sometimes make one doubt the poet’s sincerity. This is not true of the great Kokinshū poets of the 9th century—Ono Komachi, Lady Ise, Ariwara Narihira, and Tsurayuki himself—but even Buddhist priests, who presumably had renounced carnal love, wrote love poetry at the court competitions, and it is hard to detect any difference between such poems and those of actual lovers.

4:043 Dickinson, Emily: A Life of Letters, This is my letter to the world/That never wrote to me; I'll tell you how the Sun Rose/A Ribbon at a time; Hope is the thing with feathers/That perches in the soul
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The preface of the Kokinshū lists judgments on the principal poets of the collection. This criticism is unsatisfying to a modern reader because it is so terse and unanalytical, but it nevertheless marks a beginning of Japanese poetic criticism, an art that developed impressively during the course of the Heian period.

Prose

Ki Tsurayuki is celebrated also for his Tosa nikki (936; The Tosa Diary), the account of his homeward journey to Kyōto from the province of Tosa, where he had served as governor. Tsurayuki wrote this diary in Japanese, though men at the time normally kept their diaries in Chinese; that may explain why he pretended that a woman in the governor’s entourage was its author. Events of the journey are interspersed with the poems composed on various occasions. The work is affecting especially because of the repeated, though muted, references to the death of Tsurayuki’s daughter in Tosa.

Tosa nikki is the earliest example of a literary diary. Most of the later Heian diarists who wrote in the Japanese language were court ladies; their writings include some of the supreme masterpieces of the literature. Kagerō nikki (The Gossamer Years) describes the life between 954 and 974 of the second wife of Fujiwara Kaneie, a prominent court official. The first volume, related long after the events, is in the manner of an autobiographical novel; even the author confesses that her remembrances are probably tinged with fiction. The next two volumes approach a true diary, with some entries apparently made on the days indicated. The writer (known only as “the mother of Michitsuna”) describes, with many touches of self-pity, her unhappy life with her husband. She evidently assumed that readers would sympathize, and often this is the case, though her self-centred complaints are not endearing. In one passage, in which she gloats over the death of a rival’s child, her obsession with her own griefs shows to worst advantage. Yet her journal is extraordinarily moving precisely because the author dwells exclusively on universally recognizable emotions and omits the details of court life that must have absorbed the men.

Other diaries of the period include the anecdotal Murasaki Shikibu nikki (“The Diary of Murasaki Shikibu”; Eng. trans. Murasaki Shikibu: Her Diary and Poetic Memoirs), at once an absorbing literary work and a source of information on the court life the author (Murasaki Shikibu) described more romantically in her masterpiece Genji monogatari (c. 1010; The Tale of Genji) and in Izumi Shikibu nikki (The Diary of Izumi Shikibu), which is less a diary than a short story liberally ornamented with poetry.

These “diaries” are closely related in content and form to the uta monogatari (“poem tales”) that emerged as a literary genre later in the 10th century. Ise monogatari (c. 980; Tales of Ise) consists of 143 episodes, each containing one or more poems and an explanation in prose of the circumstances of composition. The brevity and often the ambiguity of the tanka gave rise to a need for such explanations, and, when these explanations became extended or (as in the case of Ise monogatari) were interpreted as biographical information about one poet (Ariwara Narihira), they approached the realm of fiction.

Along with the poem tales, there were works of religious or fanciful inspiration going back to Nihon ryōiki (822; Miraculous Stories from the Japanese Buddhist Tradition), an account of Buddhist miracles in Japan compiled by the priest Kyōkai. Priests probably used these stories, written in Chinese, as a source of sermons with the intent of persuading ordinary Japanese, incapable of reading difficult works of theology, that they must lead virtuous lives if they were not to suffer in hell for present misdeeds. No such didactic intent is noticeable in Taketori monogatari (10th century; Tale of the Bamboo Cutter), a fairy tale about a princess who comes from the Moon to dwell on Earth in the house of a humble bamboo cutter; the various tests she imposes on her suitors, fantastic though they are, are described with humour and realism.

The first lengthy work of fiction in Japanese, Utsubo monogatari (“The Tale of the Hollow Tree”), was apparently written between 970 and 983, although the last chapter may have been written later. This uneven, ill-digested work is of interest chiefly as an amalgam of elements in the poem tales and fairy tales; it contains 986 tanka, and its episodes range from early realism to pure fantasy.

The contrast between this crude work and the sublime Genji monogatari is overwhelming. The Genji monogatari is the finest work not only of the Heian period but of all Japanese literature and merits being called the first important novel written anywhere in the world. Genji monogatari was called a work of mono no aware (“a sensitivity to things”) by the great 18th-century literary scholar Motoori Norinaga; the hero, Prince Genji, is not remarkable for his martial prowess or his talents as a statesman but as an incomparable lover, sensitive to each of the many women he wins. The story is related in terms of the successive women Genji loves; each of them evokes a different response from this marvelously complex man. The last third of the novel, describing the world after Genji’s death, is much darker in tone, and the principal figures, though still impressive, seem no more than fragmentations of the peerless Genji.

The success of Genji monogatari was immediate. The author of the touching Sarashina nikki (mid-11th century; “Sarashina Diary”; Eng. trans. As I Crossed a Bridge of Dreams) describes how as a girl she longed to visit the capital so that she might read the entire work (which had been completed some 10 years earlier). Imitations and derivative works based on Genji monogatari, especially on the last third of it, continued to be written for centuries, inhibiting the fiction composed by the court society.

Makura no sōshi (c. 1000; The Pillow Book of Sei Shōnagon) is another masterpiece of the Heian period that should be mentioned with Genji monogatari. Japanese critics have often distinguished the aware of Genji monogatari and the okashi of Makura no sōshi. Aware means sensitivity to the tragic implications of a moment or gesture, okashi the comic overtones of perhaps the same moment or gesture. The lover’s departure at dawn evoked many wistful passages in Genji monogatari, but in Makura no sōshi Sei Shōnagon noted with unsparing exactness the lover’s fumbling, ineffectual leave-taking and his lady’s irritation. Murasaki Shikibu’s aware can be traced through later literature—sensitivity always marked the writings of any author in the aristocratic tradition—but Sei Shōnagon’s wit belonged to the Heian court alone.

The Heian court society passed its prime by the middle of the 11th century, but it did not collapse for another 100 years. Long after its political power had been usurped by military men, the court retained its prestige as the fountainhead of culture. But in the 12th century, literary works belonging to a quite different tradition began to appear. Konjaku monogatari (early 12th century; “Tales of Now and Then”; partially translated into English as Ages Ago and as Tales of Times Now Past), a massive collection of religious stories and folktales drawn not only from the Japanese countryside but also from Indian and Chinese sources, described elements of society that had never been treated in the court novels. These stories, though crudely written, provide glimpses of how the common people spoke and behaved in an age marked by warfare and new religious movements. The collection of folk songs Ryōjin hishō, compiled in 1179 by the emperor Go-Shirakawa, suggests the vitality of this burgeoning popular culture even as the aristocratic society was being threatened with destruction.