作者Beville, Ryan Kyle
ProQuest Information and Learning Co
University of California, Berkeley. East Asian Languages & Cultures, Japanese Language
書名Trajectories of Form in Modern Japanese Poetry [electronic resource]
出版項2015
說明1 online resource (130 p.)
附註Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 77-08(E), Section: A
Adviser: Daniel O'Neill
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of California, Berkeley, 2015
Includes bibliographical references
Form is central to poetry, if not all artistic endeavor. The Japanese literary tradition contains an array of poetic forms since its earliest extant texts, though some, like waka and kanshi, dominated poetic production for centuries. With Japan's increased exposure to Western literary forms after the start of the Meiji era in 1868, the variety of new forms expanded rapidly. For many of Japan's readers and poets, exposure to European and American literature was initially mediated by translation anthologies. As this dissertation seeks to show, many of the translators grafted new poetic practice onto pre-existing techniques, resulting in new forms and styles of poetry. Vernacular poets, often working with keen awareness of the translations, further adapted and altered those forms in their own work
Each chapter that follows documents and analyzes key aspects of form in modern Japanese poetry, including meter and rhyme. My primary tool of analysis is close reading, down to the phonemes, as rhyme and meter require, together with textual comparisons. Such close readings, often informed by linguistic research, reveal both the richness of form practiced in Japanese poetry, as well as its possibilities. They also trace the trajectory of these forms and their permutations over time. Ultimately, these analyses show that form is anything but static
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Mich. : ProQuest, 2017
Mode of access: World Wide Web
主題Literature
Electronic books.
0401
ISBN/ISSN9781339593128
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