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University of California Press
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The Rhetoric of Death and Discipleship in Premodern Japan

Socho's Death of Sogi and Kikaku's Death of Master Basho

by H. Mack Horton (Author)
Price: $32.00 / £27.00
Publication Date: Oct 2019
Publisher:
Institute of East Asian Studies, University of California Berkeley
Imprint: Institute of East Asian Studies, University of California Berkeley
Title Details:
Rights: World
Pages: 168
ISBN: 9781557291851
Trim Size: 6 x 9
Series:
  • Japan Research Monograph

About the Book

The Death of Sogi(Sogi shuenki, 1502), by Socho, and The Death of Master Basho (Basho-o shuenki, 1694), by Kikaku, are among the most important death accounts in the premodern Japanese literary corpus. Written by preeminent disciples of the poets, these accounts provide vital information about the careers of two of Japan’s most iconic literary figures and their circles of disciples. In Buddhist terms, they bear witness to the conviction that poetry itself can constitute a form of prayer that contributes to the repose and rebirth of the deceased.

This book provides annotated translations of both memorials, Socho’s account of Sogi’s death constituting an upper verse to which Kikaku linked his lower verse describing the death of Basho.  They are preceded here by an introduction that outlines how these thanatographies served the departed and the bereaved—death and discipleship—and how both memorials were subjectively fashioned in response to venerable literary precedents and to new standards of taste.  Color images of paintings of the masters and their disciples add to the presentation.

About the Author

Professor H. Mack Horton, Catherine and William L. Magistretti Chair of East Asian Languages and Cultures, teaches premodern Japanese language and literature at the University of California, Berkeley. Education: Ph.D (Oriental Languages, University of California, Berkeley), M.A. (Regional Studies East Asia, Harvard University)

Reviews

“Horton offers excellent translations of the death accounts of S?gi and Bash?, along with original answers to two important questions: how disciples of a dying master respond to his death in their own relationships and practices and how they represent loss and recovery in their own writing. A masterful study, well researched and elegantly written.”—Steven D. Carter, Stanford University

“Meticulous scholarship and elegant translation combine in this revelatory presentation of the ‘versiprose’ accounts of the deaths of two of the most famous linked-verse masters, S?gi and Bash?, written by their disciples S?ch? and Kikaku.”—Laurel Rasplica Rodd, University of Colorado at Boulder

“Mack Horton has a deep knowledge of the life and work of these two great Japanese poets, a lifetime of scholarship reflected everywhere in the volume’s introduction, translations, and detailed explanatory notes. This is a model of what an annotated translation should be.”—Machiko Midorikawa, Waseda University