Playlist: Tokugawa Japan: Bashō (1644-1694) – Master of The Haikai and Haiku Forms

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Bashō and the Evolution of Haiku

Japan

Language & Literature

Duration:

0:55 min

Appears in:

Matsuo Bashō (1644-1694) is commonly referred to by his given name, Bashō, rather than his family name, Matsuo. This is the custom with certain Japanese writers.

Transcript

[Haiku by Bashō]

te wo uteba

kodama ni akuru

natsu no tsuki

as I clap my hands

with the echoes, it begins to dawn —

the summer moon

Robert Oxnam: Bashō was a master of the haiku form, which not only retains its popularity in today's Japan, but has also been introduced into American schools at all levels.

Haiku evolved from the haikai, linked verse, that was written in the Tokugawa period. Every haikai begins with an opening verse of seventeen syllables. This opening verse was called a hokku. It was written in three lines of 5, then 7, then 5 syllables to make the total of 17 syllables. Bashō took this opening verse, the hokku, and refined it to become what is now known as the haiku.


Haiku from Makoto Ueda, Bashō and His Interpreters: Selected Hokku with Commentary (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1992), p. 317.

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About the Speakers

Donald Keene, University Professor Emeritus; Shincho Professor Emeritus of Japanese Literature
Columbia University

Robert B. Oxnam, President Emeritus
Asia Society

Haruo Shirane, Shincho Professor of Japanese Literature and Culture
Columbia University

Bibliography

An Introduction to Haiku
By Harold Gould Henderson
Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday and Company, 1958

Haikai and Haiku
Edited and translated by the Nippon Gakujutsu Shinkokai
Tokyo: Nippon Gakujutsu Shinkokai, 1958

Matsuo Bashō
By Makoto Ueda
Kodansha International, 1982

“The Poetry of Matsuo Bashō”
By Haruo Shirane
In Masterworks of Asian Literature in Comparative Perspective, edited by Barbara Stoler Miller
Armonk, N.Y.: M.E. Sharpe, 1994

Anthology of Japanese Literature: From the Earliest Era to the Mid-Nineteenth Century
Edited by Donald Keene
New York: Grove Press, 1960

“The Imaginative Universe of Japanese Literature”
By Haruo Shirane
In Masterworks of Asian Literature in Comparative Perspective, edited by Barbara Stoler Miller
Armonk, N.Y.: M.E. Sharpe, 1994

World Within Walls: Japanese Literature of the Pre-Modern Era, 1600-1867
By Donald Keene
New York: Columbia University Press, 1999

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