Kyokutei Bakin

Kyokutei Bakin

which is a pun as the kanji may also be read as "Kuruwa de Makoto" meaning a man who is truly devoted to the courtesans of the pleasure districts. Later in life he took the first name of nihongo|Toku|解|. Modern scholarship generally refers to him as Takizawa Bakin, a combination of his surname and pen name, or just as Bakin.

Born in Edo (present day Tokyo) on 4 July 1767, Bakin was the fifth son of Omon and Okiyoshi, his father and a samurai in the service of one of the Shogun's retainers Matsudaira Nobunari. Two of his older brothers died in infancy while the other two, Rabun (1759–1798) and Keichū (1765–1786) played pivotal roles in Bakin's life. His younger sister Ohisa was born in 1771 and Okiku in 1774.

In his diaries, Bakin wrote that his father, a heavy drinker, was highly devoted to scholarship and the classics, diligent in his work as a samurai. He died when Bakin was only nine years old in 1775, having aggravated his gout through drinking. Bakin's family stipend was soon reduced by half and in December of the following year, Rabun gave up his devotion to the Matsudaira in favor of living as a "rōnin". Bakin and his family were forced into a much smaller dwelling as a result.

Eventually Rabun received a new post and in 1778 Bakin's mother pretended to be sick in order to move in with him. Bakin had been placed in service of the Matsudaira lord's grandson, but was treated cruelly and ran away when only 14 in 1780. He left the following haiku as a note explaining his reasons for leaving:

:こごらしに:思い立ちけり:神の旅

:Chilled by winter winds:I have decided:To journey with the gods.

"The Eight Dog Chronicle" took 28 years to complete, and Bakin had grown blind and lost his wife and son in the meantime. The final parts of the novel were dictated to his daughter-in-law. Although he was born of lower samurai birth, Bakin renounced his status to become a writer. His works center on samurai themes, including loyalty and family honor, as well as Confucianism, bushido and Buddhist philosophy. "Nansō Satomi Hakkenden" has been adapted many times, but is best known in the West as the anime OVA "The Hakkenden".

His "Chinsetsu Yumiharizuki" ("The Crescent Moon", 1811) was adapted for the Kabuki stage by
Yukio Mishima.

[http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9071019/Takizawa-Bakin EB Bio]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужен реферат?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Kyokutei Bakin — V. Bakin …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Kyokutei Bakin — Este artículo está titulado de acuerdo a la onomástica japonesa, en que el apellido precede al nombre. Retrato de Kyokutei Bakin, por Utagawa Kunisada. Takizawa Okikuni (瀧澤興邦 …   Wikipedia Español

  • Bakin Kyokutei — (曲亭 馬琴, Kyokutei Bakin?, 1767 1848), de son vrai nom Okikuni Takizawa (滝沢 興邦, Takizawa Okikuni …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Kyokutei — Kyokutei,   Bakin, japanischer Schriftsteller, * Edo 9. 6. 1767, ✝ ebenda 6. 11. 1848; populärster Erzähler des vormodernen Japan. Im Mittelpunkt seines umfangreichen Romanwerks (etwa 260 Titel) stehen die konfuzianischen Grundtugenden, Schuld… …   Universal-Lexikon

  • Bakin — (Takizawa Kai, dit Kyokutei) (1767 1848) romancier japonais, auteur de la monumentale Histoire des huit chiens de Satomi (1814 1841) …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Nansō Satomi Hakkenden — (南總里見八犬傳?, or using simplified kanji, 南総里見八犬伝) is a Japanese 106 volume epic novel by Kyokutei Bakin. Written over a period of nearly thirty years and published from 1814 to 1842, Bakin had gone blind before finishing the tale, and the final… …   Wikipedia

  • X (manga) — Infobox animanga/Header name = X caption = X logo ja name = エックス ja name trans = Ekkusu genre = Urban fantasyInfobox animanga/Manga demographic = Shōjo author = Clamp publisher = Kadokawa Shoten publisher other = flagicon|Canada flagicon|United… …   Wikipedia

  • Japanese literature — spans a period of almost two millennia. Early works were heavily influenced by cultural contact with China and Chinese literature, often written in Classical Chinese. But Japanese literature developed into a separate style in its own right as… …   Wikipedia

  • Сатоми и восемь псов — Госпожа Фусэ спасает …   Википедия

  • Ronin — A nihongo|ronin|浪人|rōnin was a samurai with no lord or master during the feudal period (1185–1868) of Japan. A samurai became masterless from the ruin or fall of his master (as in the case of death in a war), or after the loss of his master s… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”