{"title":"Poet Sogi’s Journey to Shirakawa Barrier","authors":"Tatiana I. Breslavets, Yuriy L. Kuzhel’","doi":"10.21638/spbu13.2023.203","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The diary of the Japanese poet Sogi (1421–1502) “Shirakawa kiko” (“Journey to the Shirakawa Barrier”, 1468) is analyzed. The sacred place, sung in the lyrics of the past, is the beginning of the song (utamakura). The diary is divided into two parts. This is the result of the development of the genre in the art of renga (connected stanzas) poets. The subject of the study is the prose part. It reveals an increased suggestiveness (yojo) of artistic speech. In the reminiscent variety, a picture of intertextual discourse is formed, the significance of the literary tradition is revealed. It makes up the latent layer of the text, covering the entire narrative. The essay is considered as a memoir diary, it is dominated by emotional content (aware), dating back to the cult of feelings of the aristocratic era. In the chronotope of the diary, a plexus of times and spaces is found, creating an illusory vision of reality as a reflection of the poet’s Zen consciousness. The journey remains unfinished, affirming the infinity of the path and recalling the rotation of the wheel of samsara — the cycle of life and death. The path in the illusory, changeable world affirms the idea of mortal existence (mujo), which has become the fundamental Zen Buddhist concept of the diary.","PeriodicalId":40378,"journal":{"name":"Vestnik Sankt-Peterburgskogo Universiteta-Iskusstvovedenie","volume":"127 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2023-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Vestnik Sankt-Peterburgskogo Universiteta-Iskusstvovedenie","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.21638/spbu13.2023.203","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The diary of the Japanese poet Sogi (1421–1502) “Shirakawa kiko” (“Journey to the Shirakawa Barrier”, 1468) is analyzed. The sacred place, sung in the lyrics of the past, is the beginning of the song (utamakura). The diary is divided into two parts. This is the result of the development of the genre in the art of renga (connected stanzas) poets. The subject of the study is the prose part. It reveals an increased suggestiveness (yojo) of artistic speech. In the reminiscent variety, a picture of intertextual discourse is formed, the significance of the literary tradition is revealed. It makes up the latent layer of the text, covering the entire narrative. The essay is considered as a memoir diary, it is dominated by emotional content (aware), dating back to the cult of feelings of the aristocratic era. In the chronotope of the diary, a plexus of times and spaces is found, creating an illusory vision of reality as a reflection of the poet’s Zen consciousness. The journey remains unfinished, affirming the infinity of the path and recalling the rotation of the wheel of samsara — the cycle of life and death. The path in the illusory, changeable world affirms the idea of mortal existence (mujo), which has become the fundamental Zen Buddhist concept of the diary.
本文分析了日本诗人Sogi(1421-1502)的日记“白川纪子”(“Journey to Shirakawa Barrier”,1468)。在过去的歌词中歌唱的神圣的地方,是歌曲(utamakura)的开始。日记分为两部分。这是连诗(连诗)诗人艺术中体裁发展的结果。本文的研究对象是散文部分。它揭示了艺术演讲的暗示性(约约)的增加。在回忆的多样性中,形成了一幅互文话语的图景,揭示了文学传统的意义。它构成了文本的潜在层,覆盖了整个叙事。这篇随笔被认为是一本回忆录日记,它以情感内容(意识)为主,可以追溯到崇尚感情的贵族时代。在日记的时间轴中,发现了时间和空间的神经丛,创造了一种虚幻的现实景象,反映了诗人的禅宗意识。旅程仍未完成,肯定了道路的无限,并回忆起轮回之轮的旋转——生与死的循环。在虚幻的、多变的世界中的路径肯定了凡人存在的观念(mujo),这已经成为禅宗日记的基本概念。