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  1. 国際日本文学研究集会
  2. 国際日本文学研究集会会議録
  3. 第7回

研究発表(2) 戦争と詩 ―与謝野晶子から山之口貘まで―

https://doi.org/10.24619/00002070
https://doi.org/10.24619/00002070
7e592e5a-6500-4bd1-8010-7ecac70175bf
名前 / ファイル ライセンス アクション
I0705.pdf 研究発表(2) 戦争と詩 ―与謝野晶子から山之口貘まで― (9.5 MB)
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Item type 会議発表論文 / Conference Paper(1)
公開日 2016-08-05
タイトル
タイトル 研究発表(2) 戦争と詩 ―与謝野晶子から山之口貘まで―
タイトル
タイトル War and Poetry: From Yosano Akiko to Yamanoguchi Baku
言語 en
言語
言語 jpn
資源タイプ
資源タイプ識別子 http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_5794
資源タイプ conference paper
ID登録
ID登録 10.24619/00002070
ID登録タイプ JaLC
著者 Rabson, Steve

× Rabson, Steve

WEKO 24679

Rabson, Steve

ja-Kana ラブソン, スティーブ

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RABSON, Steve

× RABSON, Steve

WEKO 24680

en RABSON, Steve

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内容記述タイプ Abstract
内容記述 Since the early 20th century Japanese poets have written with intensity and eloquence in opposition to war. Antiwar poetry in Japan has been composed across a broad spectrum of genres, styles, and philosophical perspectives. Poetry opposed to war in Japan, as elsewhere, tends to by highly personal in nature. Poets often describe the experience of the individual in wartime. Some write explicitly about family members, lovers, friends, and about their own experiences in poems that extract war from the depersonalizing realm of newspaper headlines and casualty figures.
During the Russo-Japanese War, Ōtsuka Kusuoko and Yosano Akiko wrote about soldiers at the front. Yosano's admonition to her brother at Port Arthur in "Do Not Give Your Life" caused another poet,Ōmachi Keigetsu, to charge her with treason when the poem was first published in 1904. It has been the subject of lively controversy among literary critics ever since. After World War I poets Momota Sōji and Fukuda Masao wrote poems bitterly critical of Japan's costly military thrust into Siberia. In the 1920s poetry oppesed to war in Japan was often heavily infused with the doctrine of the Proletarian Literature movement. But such works as Miyoshi Jūro's "A Letter to Shantung" and Negishi Masayoshi's highly sarcastic "For the Sake of the Nation" were less ideological in their criticism of the military and the draft.
The vast majority of writers in Japan supported the nation's war effort between 1937 and 1945. Still, controversy remains over a small number of poets, such as Yamanoguchi Baku and Kaneko Mitsuharu, whose writing of this period has been interpreted as critical of the war. With the revulsion toward war felt in Japan since 1945, poets have regularly produced antiwar poems that have been published singly and in anthologies.
書誌情報 国際日本文学研究集会会議録
en : PROCEEDINGS OF INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON JAPANESE LITERATURE

号 7, p. 73-87, 発行日 1984-03-01
出版者
出版者 国文学研究資料館
ISSN
収録物識別子タイプ ISSN
収録物識別子 0387-7280
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内容記述タイプ Other
内容記述 pdf
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