Hototogisu (magazine)
Hototogisu (ホトトギス "lesser cuckoo"?) is a Japanese literary magazine focusing primarily on haiku. Founded in 1897, it was responsible for the spread of modern haiku among the Japanese public[1] and is now Japan's most prestigious and long-lived haiku periodical.[2]
History
Hototogisu was founded in 1897 in Matsuyama by Yanagihara Kyokudō, who edited it under the direction of Masaoka Shiki.[3] It soon became the leading forum for Shiki's Nippon school of haiku. The following year, the magazine's headquarters moved to Tokyo and its editorship was taken over by Takahama Kyoshi.[3] At the same time, the magazine's scope was expanded to include tanka and haibun as well has haiku, and Shiki began publishing essays in his shaseibun ("sketch from life prose") style.[4] It had established itself as Japan's leading haiku magazine by this time, and the first Tokyo edition sold out on its first day.[5]
Following Shiki's death in 1902, the magazine's focus shifted to the fiction of modernist writers such as Natsume Sōseki, but in 1912 Kyoshi once again began including haiku.[6]
In 1916, Kyoshi initiated the "Kitchen Miscellanies" column in Hototogisu to promote the writings of women haiku poets such as Sugita Hisajo.[7][8]
When Kyoshi died in 1959, editorship passed to his son Toshio.[9] Since 1979, the editor has been Teiko Inahata (b. 1931), Kyoshi's granddaughter.[1][10][11]
Notable contributors
- Dakotsu Iida
- Takahama Kyoshi
- Takashi Matsumoto
- Yaeko Nogami
- Itō Sachio
- Sokotsu Samukawa
- Natsume Sōseki
- Masaoka Shiki
- Murakami Kijo
Notes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Hirai (2003), p. 7.
- ↑ Ueda (2003), p. x.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Beichman (2002), p. 26.
- ↑ Beichman (2002), p. 27.
- ↑ Beichman (2002), p. 152.
- ↑ Higginson (1985), p. 27.
- ↑ Rodd, Laurel Rasplica. "Meiji Women's Poetry" in Copeland & Ortabasi (2006), p. 32
- ↑ Ueda (2003), p. xxvi.
- ↑ Higginson (1985), p. 28.
- ↑ Donegan (2010), p. 100.
- ↑ Ueda (2003), p. xxxii.
References
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