@inproceedings{oai:kokubunken.repo.nii.ac.jp:00002262, author = {金, 粉淑 and KIM, BunSuk}, book = {国際日本文学研究集会会議録, PROCEEDINGS OF INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON JAPANESE LITERATURE}, issue = {20}, month = {Oct}, note = {pdf, In the most famous medieval woman's diary Towazugatari, the word yume ("dream") appears 66 times. Of these, those referring directly to dreams experienced by the author Nijo total twelve: eight dreams about herself, two dreams about Gofukakusa-In, one dream about Yuki-no-Akebono and one dream about Ariake-no-Tsuki. Nijo's dreams can be classified as (1) four dreams relating to her late father Masatada, (2) three dreams about her pregnancy, (3) one dream of the ghost of Ariake, (4) one dream warning her of the death of Gofukakusa-In and (5) the others three dream. Those in (1) are the first and last dreams in the first volume, and form the center of the work's psychological world. They show the relationship between Nijo and her late father, hinting at Nijo's sense of unease, her sense of loss of a guardian figure, her release from her father's control, in addition to expressing her psychological and physical state and her new "discovery" of her father's role. The dreams in (2) utilize the dream format as a new narrative method, in which the author's pregnancy and birth are announced within her dreams. The dreams of (3) (4) and (5) disclose an outpouring of desires directed toward specific lovers. This summary of dreams in Towazugatari reveals an attachment to various persons and a transformation from a "systemized" time sphere to a "festive" time sphere, as well as showing a change in Nijo's intellectual stance from a "non-medieval" to an "anti-medieval" one.}, pages = {9--31}, publisher = {国文学研究資料館}, title = {研究発表 『とはずがたり』の夢 ―執着心を克服する女としての二条―}, year = {1997}, yomi = {キム, ブンスク} }