Circle within Walls: A Comparative Study on Poets of Leprosariums

Many forms of literature are nurtured in circles or salon-like environments, where participants with mutual interests serve alternately as creators, readers, and critics. This was especially true with waka, a poetic form with 31 syllables, during the Heian period, which had an immense impact on the...

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Main Author: Robert Ono
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The International Academic Forum 2017-11-01
Series:IAFOR Journal of Literature & Librarianship
Subjects:
Online Access:https://iafor.org/journal/iafor-journal-of-literature-and-librarianship/volume-6-issue-1/article-4/
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spelling doaj-88c93918e4e64bc8a95c6ac465ad44102020-11-24T20:44:24ZengThe International Academic ForumIAFOR Journal of Literature & Librarianship2187-06082187-06082017-11-0161618010.22492/ijl.6.1.04Circle within Walls: A Comparative Study on Poets of LeprosariumsRobert OnoMany forms of literature are nurtured in circles or salon-like environments, where participants with mutual interests serve alternately as creators, readers, and critics. This was especially true with waka, a poetic form with 31 syllables, during the Heian period, which had an immense impact on the formation of Japanese literature. Since the modernization of Japan, mainstream writers have formed a much more large-scale and sophisticated literary establishment called the bundan. However, it must not be overlooked that many writers were active outside such mainstream currents. Literary circles within leprosariums, to which this paper pays special attention, are a good example. A dozen or so leprosariums were home to tens of thousands of patients who were forced to leave their families. In such facilities many sought refuge in literature; they expressed themselves freely through tanka, the modern version of waka, in intramural magazines, and strived to enrich the culture of their very own “leprosy literature.” Using magazines such as Kikuchino, Kaede, and Aisei as primary sources, this paper clarifies that many patients were eager to express their identities through depicting their illness, but were at the same time mindful not to go against authority, since the magazines were scrutinized by staff members of the leprosariums. It must also be noted that for some patients who were seriously committed to literature, the fixed verses of tanka were considered insufficient as a means to express one’s true self, compared to more highly regarded forms such as the novel.https://iafor.org/journal/iafor-journal-of-literature-and-librarianship/volume-6-issue-1/article-4/Chōmeileprosy literaturetankaliterary circleHansen’s diseaseleprosarium
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Robert Ono
spellingShingle Robert Ono
Circle within Walls: A Comparative Study on Poets of Leprosariums
IAFOR Journal of Literature & Librarianship
Chōmei
leprosy literature
tanka
literary circle
Hansen’s disease
leprosarium
author_facet Robert Ono
author_sort Robert Ono
title Circle within Walls: A Comparative Study on Poets of Leprosariums
title_short Circle within Walls: A Comparative Study on Poets of Leprosariums
title_full Circle within Walls: A Comparative Study on Poets of Leprosariums
title_fullStr Circle within Walls: A Comparative Study on Poets of Leprosariums
title_full_unstemmed Circle within Walls: A Comparative Study on Poets of Leprosariums
title_sort circle within walls: a comparative study on poets of leprosariums
publisher The International Academic Forum
series IAFOR Journal of Literature & Librarianship
issn 2187-0608
2187-0608
publishDate 2017-11-01
description Many forms of literature are nurtured in circles or salon-like environments, where participants with mutual interests serve alternately as creators, readers, and critics. This was especially true with waka, a poetic form with 31 syllables, during the Heian period, which had an immense impact on the formation of Japanese literature. Since the modernization of Japan, mainstream writers have formed a much more large-scale and sophisticated literary establishment called the bundan. However, it must not be overlooked that many writers were active outside such mainstream currents. Literary circles within leprosariums, to which this paper pays special attention, are a good example. A dozen or so leprosariums were home to tens of thousands of patients who were forced to leave their families. In such facilities many sought refuge in literature; they expressed themselves freely through tanka, the modern version of waka, in intramural magazines, and strived to enrich the culture of their very own “leprosy literature.” Using magazines such as Kikuchino, Kaede, and Aisei as primary sources, this paper clarifies that many patients were eager to express their identities through depicting their illness, but were at the same time mindful not to go against authority, since the magazines were scrutinized by staff members of the leprosariums. It must also be noted that for some patients who were seriously committed to literature, the fixed verses of tanka were considered insufficient as a means to express one’s true self, compared to more highly regarded forms such as the novel.
topic Chōmei
leprosy literature
tanka
literary circle
Hansen’s disease
leprosarium
url https://iafor.org/journal/iafor-journal-of-literature-and-librarianship/volume-6-issue-1/article-4/
work_keys_str_mv AT robertono circlewithinwallsacomparativestudyonpoetsofleprosariums
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