Ihara Saikaku
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ihara Saikaku (Japanese: 井原西鶴; 1642–1693) was a Japanese poet and creator of the "floating world" genre of Japanese prose (ukiyo-zōshi).
Born the son of the wealthy merchant Hirayama Tōgō in Osaka, he first studied haikai poetry under Matsunaga Teitoku, and later studied under Nishiyama Sōin of the Danrin School of poetry, which emphasized comic linked verse. It is rumoured he wrote over 23,500 haikai in one day and night.
Later in life he began writing racy accounts of the financial and amorous affairs of the merchant class and the demimonde. These stories catered to the whims of the newly prominent merchant class, whose tastes of entertainment leaned toward the arts and pleasure districts.
Contents |
[edit] Life
In 1642, Ihara Saikaku was born into a well off merchant family in Osaka. From the age of fifteen Saikaku had begun to compose haikai (linked verse). In 1662 at the age of twenty Saikaku had become a haikai master. Under the pen name Ihara Kakuei, Saikaku began to establish himself as a popular haikai poet. By 1670 Saikaku had developed his own distinctive style of haikai poetry. In essence his haikai style relied on the use of colloquial language to depict contemporary chonin life. Furthermore, during this time Saikaku also owned and ran a medium sized business in Osaka.
In 1673 Saikaku had changed his pen name to the one we recognise today. However, the death of his dearly beloved wife in 1675 had an extremely profound impact on Saikaku. A few days after her passing in an act of grief and true love Saikaku started to compose a thousand-verse haikai poem in a matter of twelve hours. When this work was published it was called ‘Haikai Single Day Thousand Verse’ (Haikai Dokugin Ichinichi Senku).
It was the first time that Saikaku had attempted to compose such a lengthy piece of literature. The overall experience and success that Saikaku received from composing such a mammoth exercise has been attributed to sparking off the writer’s interest in writing fictional novels.
However, shortly after his wife’s death the grief stricken Saikaku had decided to become a lay monk and began to travel all across Japan, thus leaving behind his three children (one of whom was blind) to be cared for by his extended family and his business by his employees.
In 1677 Saikaku returned to Osaka and had learnt of the success his thousand-verse haikai poem had received and from then on pursued a career as a professional writer. Initially Saikaku continued to produce haikai poetry, but by 1682 he had published his first of many fictional novels ‘The Life of an Amorous Man’.
As Saikaku’s popularity and readership began to increase and expand across Japan so did the amount of literature he published. In 1693, at the age of fifty-one Saikaku had passed away as one of the most popular writers of the entire Tokugawa period. Yet at the time Saikaku’s work was never considered high literature because it had been aimed towards and popularised by the chonin. Nevertheless, Saikaku’s work is now celebrated for its significance for developing Japanese fictional literature.
[edit] Works
[edit] Amorous or erotic stories
- The Man Who Spent His Life in Love (1682)
- The Great Mirror of Beauties: Son of an Amorous Man (1684)
- Five Women Who Loved Love (1685)
- The Woman Who Spent Her Life in Love (1686)
- The Great Mirror of Male Love (1687)
[edit] Townspeople (Chōnin 町人) stories
- Twenty Cases of Unfilial Children (1686)
- Japanese Family Storehouse (1688)
- Worldly Mental Calculations (1692)
[edit] Warrior stories
- Transmission of the Martial Arts (1687)
- Tales of Samurai Honor (1688)
[edit] Sample prose
- Men take their misfortunes to heart, and keep them there. A gambler does not talk about his losses; the frequenter of brothels, who finds his favorite engaged by another, pretends to be just as well off without her; the professional street-brawler is quiet about the fights he has lost; and a merchant who speculates on goods will conceal the losses he may suffer. All act as one who steps on dog dung in the dark.
Ihara Saikaku, "What the Seasons Brought to the Almanac-Maker" (1686)