In praise of solitude : two Japanese classics on reclusion
Yasutane Yoshishige (Author), Chōmei Kamo (Author), Reginald Jackson (Illustrator), Rosemarie Roberts (Editor), Matthew Gerald Stavros (Author, Translator, Annotator)
Annotation. Early Japanese literature is replete with protagonists who exchange urbane comforts and lofty status for lives of solitude, well removed from the drama and dross of the city. This book presents two such classics of recluse writing from the 10th and 13th centuries. The first, Chiteiki (982), is the memoir of Yoshishige no Yasutane, a mid-level civil servant, deeply disillusioned by the urban decay of the imperial capital. Intent upon simulating the eremitic life, he builds a walled residence in the city's south. Inside, he indulges romantic notions about a life apart, lost in the pleasures of literature and religious devotion. The second work, Hojoki (c. 1213), is Kamo no Chomei's personal account of a life-long journey toward increasingly remote modes of living. This masterpiece of Japanese renunciate writing exemplifies a medieval Japanese ethos colored by a pervasive mindfulness about the evanescence of existence. Although both works are unmistakably inspired by a Buddhist worldview from a different place and time, their messages are universal.These all-new translations of Chiteiki and Hojoki are accompanied by the primary Japanese source texts, detailed scholarly annotations, and original maps and illustrations. The companion website at www.vicuslusorum.com provides digital resources and learning materials
eBook, English, 2022
Vicus Lusorum, [Voyager Point, N.S.W.], 2022