Images from the Past: Intertextuality in Japanese Premodern Literature
open access | peer reviewed-
edited by
- Carolina Negri - Università Ca’ Foscari Venezia, Italia - email orcid profile
- Pier Carlo Tommasi - University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, USA - email orcid profile
Abstract
This volume brings together scholars from different backgrounds and career stages to rethink the role and scope of intertextuality in the context of premodern Japan. From antiquity to the rise of modernity, originality through repetition persists as a staple in the literary, performative, and artistic traditions of this country. Nonetheless, rather than slavish recycling of pre-existing tropes, the redeployment of familiar motifs by patterns of borrowing, allusion, and imitation would become a means to explore untrodden creative pathways and craft a shared sense of cultural belonging. Stemming from an international symposium hosted at Ca’ Foscari University of Venice in 2021 with the generous support of The Japan Foundation, the papers in this collection offer a thoughtful contribution to this debate by engaging texts from different historical periods, media, and genres – be it poetic, narrative, theatrical, visual, or religious. Although intertextuality may not be a new topic, the essays that follow attest to the enduring appeal of a concept whose explanatory power proves most effective when combined with other methods of inquiry, such as discourse analysis, social sciences, gender studies, and material culture. Thus, while opening new windows onto Japan’s literary worlds, these cross-disciplinary approaches provide further insights into the uses (and abuses) of the past in a non-Western non-modern society.
Keywords Classical Chinese literature • Nihon ryōiki • Kokin wakashū • Layers of narration in intertextuality • Sūtras • Ise monogatari • Kabuki • Religion • Yomihon • Kawara-no-in • Kana literature • Book indexes • Waka • Genji monogatari • Gender dynamics • Court Diary • Buddhism • San’yūtei Enchō • Sarayashiki • Dōgen • Edo literature • Premodern Japanese literature • Outer writings • Ki no Tsurayuki, Kagerō nikki • Text • Intertextuality • Sarashina nikki • Tsuruya Nanboku IV • Temporality • Roland Barthes • Mythologies • Katsura Bunji I • Metatextuality • Morishima Chūryō • Shinkokinshū • Nun Abutsu • Re-interpretation • Zen • Chinese novels • Female enlightenment • Fantastic literature • Inner scriptures • Commentaries • Utatane • Baba Bunkō • Nō theatre • Japanese poetry • Fujiwara no Shunzei (Toshinari) • Fujiwara no Teika (Sadaie) • Sharebon
Permalink http://doi.org/10.30687/978-88-6969-608-4 | e-ISBN 978-88-6969-608-4 | ISBN (PRINT) 978-88-6969-609-1 | Published Aug. 30, 2022 | Language en
Copyright © 2022 Carolina Negri, Pier Carlo Tommasi. This is an open-access work distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction is permitted, provided that the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. The license allows for commercial use. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.