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Forty-Seven Samurai Hiroaki Sato

Forty-Seven Samurai By Hiroaki Sato

Forty-Seven Samurai by Hiroaki Sato


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Summary

One of the most spectacular vendettas ever: the history and haiku behind the mass-suicide featured in the 2013 film 47 Ronin

Forty-Seven Samurai Summary

Forty-Seven Samurai: A Tale of Vengeance & Death in Haiku and Letters by Hiroaki Sato

A remarkable and true tale of loyalty, vengeance, and ritual suicide. . . . In the spring of 1701, the regional lord Asano Naganori wounded his supervising official, Kira Yoshinaka, during an important ceremony in the ruling shogunate's Edo Castle and was at once condemned to death. Within two years, in the dead of winter, a band of forty-seven of Asano's retainers avenged him by breaking into Yoshinaka's mansion and killing him. Subsequently, all the men were sentenced to death but allowed to perform it honorably by seppuku.

This incident-often called the Ako Incident-became a symbol of samurai honor andat once prompted stage dramatization in kabuki and puppet theater. It has since has been told and retold in short and long stories, movies, TV dramas. The story has also attracted the attention of foreign writers and translators. The most recent retelling was the 2013 Hollywood film 47 Ronin, with Keanu Reeves, though it was wildly and willfully distorted.

What did actually happen and how has this famous vendetta resonated through history? Hiroaki Sato's examination is a close, comprehensive look at the Ako Incident through the context of its times, portraits of the main protagonists, and its literary legacy in the haiku ofthe avengers. Also included is Sato's new translation of Akutagawa Ryunosuke's short story about leader Oishi Kuranosuke as he awaited sentencing.

Forty-Seven Samurai Reviews

One of Japan's most sprawling and endlessly intriguing of bloody epics... Hiroaki Sato weaves a rich portrait of a paradoxical society governed by value systems vastly different to our own.

-Damian Flanagan, The Japan Times

The vengeance of the Forty-Seven Samurai ended in an early-morning flash of violence and bravado. This book is the scaffolding under that flash. Here are the warring claims to how the incident came to pass; here are contemporary accounts, but also the vivid poems, plays, stories and penal codes that have been revivifying that legend in the centuries since.

-Forrest Gander, Pulitzer Prize-winning author

Hiroaki Sato, a poet, author of Legends of the Samurai (where he first retells this story) and the PEN award-winning translator of many Japanese writers including Princess Shikishi, Yukio Mishima and Kenji Miyazawa, does something which others have not attempted, namely to provide more than just an accurate historical account of the event and its aftermath. Sato allows the participants to speak in their own words through their own haiku and letters, which immediately renders them three-dimensional and thoroughly human.

-The Asian Review of Books

A striking mosaic of original source materials. By creating a Rashomon Effect with his multi-faceted approach Sato deepens the mysteries of the 47 Ronin Incident.

-Doris G. Bargen, Author of Suicidal Honor

Sato enlightens his readers, in English, on Japanese customs and culture relative to the incidents of the 47 Ronin with history, correspondence, and poetry, which may be unknown even to the Japanese people.

-Prof. Allan Sosei Palmer, Urasenke Chanoyu, Kyoto, Boston

The pre-eminent translator of Japanese poetry in our time...possessed of an unfiltered enthusiasm and spontaneity.

-August Kleinzahler, London Review of Books

Over the last four decades, English-speaking aficionados of modern Japanese literature have delighted in the numerous translations, both of prose and poetry, undertaken by the masterful hand of translator, essayist, and poet Hiroaki Sato.

-Meera Viswanathan

About Hiroaki Sato

Hiroaki Sato is a prolific, award-winning writer of books on Japanese history and literature, and a translator of classical and modern Japanese poetry into English. American poet Gary Snyder has called Sato perhaps the finest translator of contemporary Japanese poetry into American English.

He is the author of the classic works Legends of the Samurai. and The Sword and the Mind

His reviews and articles have appeared in The Philadelphia Inquirer, The New York Times Book Review, AsiaWeek, Mainichi Daily News, St. Andrews Review, Journal of the Association of Teachers of Japanese, The Journal of American and Canadian Studies, Comparative Literature Studies, The Japan Times, The Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies, The Journal of Japanese Studies, Modern Haiku, Japan Focus, and others.

He recently received the 2017-2018 Japan-U.S. Friendship Commission Translation Prize for Silver Spoon (Stone Bridge Press).

Table of Contents

Contents

Introduction

Part I: Grudge and Vendetta (12,500 words)

  • The Country Is Full of Light
  • Shogun Tsunayoshi and Genroku Era
  • Pitying the Sentient Edicts
  • A Haiku Scholar's Take
  • Titles and Number of Participants
  • Asano Attacks Kira
  • Why Did Asano Want to Kill Kira?
  • Neither a Daimyo Nor a Samurai
  • Dramatic Elements
  • Seppuku
  • The Treatment of Avengers
  • Camouflage

Part II: Leader Oishi Kuranosuke and His Men (19,400 words)

  • Escheatment
  • The First Ninja's Report
  • We Are All Hicks
  • Another Ninja's Report
  • The Disagreements
  • Onodera Junai's Letters
  • Failure to Commit Seppuku Mocked
  • Restoring the Asano House
  • The Radicals
  • Kuranosuke Responds
  • Kuranosuke's Appearance
  • Sword Fights and Killings
  • Uncertain Samurai Life
  • Kuranosuke Indulges in Gay Quarters
  • A House of Sorrow
  • Did Kuranosuke Really Drown in Wine and Flesh?
  • The Way of the Samurai
  • Kuranosuke's Last Letters

Chapter III: Poetic Connections

  • Gengo's Travelogue: Going Down the Tokaido Road in a Daimyo Procession
  • Gengo's Haikai Teacher Sentoku's Opinion: Was the Lord President of Ako Stingy?
  • Gengo Pays Respects to Basho's Grave
  • 1697: Another Ill Effect of Pitying the Sentient
  • Gengo's Haikai Anthology and Kayano Sanpei's Suicide
  • A Mysterious Tale about a Mysterious Birth
  • How Otaka Shiyo Made Use of Haikai Man Teisa
  • Gengo's Encounter with Haikai Master Kikaku the Day before the Vendetta
  • Kikaku's Letter on the Night of the Raid
  • A Real Kikaku Letter?
  • The Great Fire, Asano Naganao, the Firefighters' Uniform
  • The Announcement, the Raid, and its Aftermath
  • Extracts from the First Full Account of the Forty-Seven Samurai
  • Otaka Gengo's Farewell-to-the-World Verse
  • Sentoku's Other Students
  • Another Story about Teisa and Ako Men
  • A Spearman Had to Drop Out

IV: An Akutagawa Story

Bibliography

Index

Additional information

NPB9781611720549
9781611720549
1611720540
Forty-Seven Samurai: A Tale of Vengeance & Death in Haiku and Letters by Hiroaki Sato
New
Paperback
Stone Bridge Press
2019-12-12
280
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a new book - be the first to read this copy. With untouched pages and a perfect binding, your brand new copy is ready to be opened for the first time

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