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Early Modern Japanese Literature: An Anthology, 1600-1900

4.7 out of 5 stars 6 customer reviews
ISBN-13: 978-0231109901
ISBN-10: 0231109903
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Product Details

  • Series: Translations from the Asian Classics
  • Hardcover: 1392 pages
  • Publisher: Columbia University Press (August 15, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0231109903
  • ISBN-13: 978-0231109901
  • Product Dimensions: 6.6 x 2 x 9.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 3.6 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,908,139 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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By William J. Higginson on May 10, 2004
Format: Hardcover
Haruo Shirane has given us a new and at once deeper and broader look at "early modern" Japanese literature than was previously possible. This is the first attempt at a gathering of the riches available in English translation--with many new translations made for this volume--since Donald Keene's landmark *Anthology of Japanese Literature: From the Earliest Era to the Mid-Nineteenth Century* published half a century ago (1955, to be precise). Whereas Keene's volume attempted to sketch well over a millennium in less than 450 pages, Shirane's spends more than 1000 larger pages on just three centuries: about a quarter of the time period represented in Keene's work covered in about three times the space.

The core and plan of Shirane's anthology revolves around the speedy and often jumpy evolution of literally dozens of genres of popular literature amidst a continuing reverence for and attempts to adapt the fundamentals of classical Heian, medieval Japanese, and Chinese culture to the new plebeian situation of Tokugawa Japan. The scores of complex and detailed introductions and sometimes minute examples (often two or three of one-page or less) initially seem like the work of too many designers and far more colors than a single tapestry could support. (At 108 rather smaller pages devoted to the same period, and containing reference to only a handful of genres, Keene's earlier anthology barely scratches the Tokugawa surface.)

Understandably, Keene's treatment of Tokugawa literature was brief, and concentrated on more accessible genres that needed less background information for at least a beginning appreciation. Shirane's work, of necessity, gives almost equal weight to background and translations.
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Format: Paperback
I have hardly made much progress through these 2000-plus pages, containing the work of thirty-two contributors, some immediately recognizable, others unfamiliar to me, and two (Donald Keene and Burton Watson) well-represented on my shelves. The library copy I started reading a couple of years ago was in demand, and I only had a short time to use it. I also skipped around quite a lot; it invites browsing. With the paperback edition now in my hands, however, I feel it would be useful to post a note (a sort of review-in-progress) both to clarify statements in one of the reviews of the hardcover edition, and give a general impression of the book for those even *less* at home in Japanese studies than myself.

Haruo Shirane's "Early Modern Japanese Literature" appears to have been designed to serve, along with a companion volume on earlier Japanese literature, as the equivalent of the well-known "Norton Anthology of English Literature," available for classroom use as much, or more, as for casual reading. At least, this is my guess at what was in the mind of the Columbia University Press editorial director, Jennifer Crewe, whom the editor credits with suggesting and facilitating the project.

As in the Norton volumes, there is a lot of historical information in an extended introduction (the whole first section), and clear introductions to the following twenty-six sections on specific genres. Again, informative-looking notes are abundant in some sections, although rare in others, corresponding to a reader's likely needs, not a critic's desire to offer new interpretations. (So far I have found them very helpful.)

It differs from the Norton Anthologies and other American textbooks of literature in one particular.
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Format: Paperback Verified Purchase
this book took you into the culture of Japanese culture and made you feel like you were there.
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