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Revision as of 21:53, 24 December 2008 by Bagworm (talk | contribs) (→See also: expand and refine)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)Renku (連句, "linked verses"), the Japanese form of popular collaborative linked verse poetry formerly known as haikai no renga (俳諧の連歌), is an offshoot of the older Japanese poetic tradition of ushin renga, or orthodox collaborative linked verse. At renga gatherings participating poets would take turns providing alternating verses of 17 syllables and 14 syllables. Initially haikai no renga distinguished itself through vulgarity and coarseness of wit, before growing into a legitimate artistic tradition, and eventually giving birth to the haiku form of Japanese poetry.
Development
Traditional renga was a group activity in which each participant displayed his wit by spontaneously composing a verse in response to the verse that came before; the more interesting the relationship between the two verses the more impressive the poet’s ability. The links between verses could range from vulgar to artistic, but as renga was taken up by skilled poets and developed into a set form, the vulgarity of its early days came to be ignored.
Haikai no renga, in response to the stale set forms that preceded it, embraced this vulgar attitude and was typified by contempt for traditional poetic and cultural ideas, and by the rough, uncultured language that it used. The haikai spirit, as it came to be called, embraced the natural humor that came from the combination of disparate elements. To that end haikai poets would often combine elements of traditional poems with new ones they created. Perhaps the most famous example of this early attitude is a poem by Yamazaki Sokan (1464-1552) from his Inutsukubashū (犬筑波集, "Mongrel Renga Collection").
He was given the following prompt:
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to which he responded:
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This poem clearly derives its humor from shock value. Never before in Japanese culture had anyone dared to talk of the goddess of spring in such a manner. Taking an ostensibly traditional and poetic prompt and making it funny while maintaining the connection of the damp hems and the spring mists was exactly the sort of thing that early haikai poets were famous for.
A comparable, though less evolved, tradition of 'linked verse' (lién jù, written with the same characters as 'renku') evolved in Chin-dynasty China, and it has been argued that this Chinese form influenced Japanese renga during its formative period.
Formats used in renku
Here follows a list of the formats most commonly used in writing renku
Name of format | Number of stanzas |
Number of kaishi (writing sheets) |
Number of sides |
Originator | Date of origin |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hyakuin | 100 | 4 | 8 | unknown | 13 century |
Kasen | 36 | 2 | 4 | unknown | 17 century |
Han-kasen (i.e. half-kasen) | 18 | 1 | 2 | unknown | 17 century |
Shisan | 12 | 2 | 4 | Kaoru Kubota | 1970's |
Jūnichō | 12 | 1 | 1 | Shunjin Okamoto | 1989 |
Nijūin | 20 | 2 | 4 | Meiga Higashi | 1980's |
Triparshva | 22 | 1 | 3 | Norman Darlington | 2005 |
Rokku (aka on za rokku) | variable | variable | variable | Haku Asanuma | 2000's |
Notes
- Finch, Annie & Varnes, Kathrine. An Exaltation of Forms, University of Michigan Press, 2002, ISBN 0472067257, p.228
- Reckert, Stephen, Beyond Chrysanthemums: Perspectives on Poetry East and West, Oxford University Press, 1993, ISBN 0198151659, p.43
- Sato, Hiroaki. One Hundred Frogs, from renga to haiku to English, Weatherhill 1983, ISBN 0-8348-0176-0 p.11
- Carley, John E. Common types of renku sequence.
- Carter, Steven D. The road to Komatsubara, Harvard University Press, 1987, ISBN 0-674-77385-3.
- Higginson, William J. Shorter Renku in Renku Home
- Darlington, Norman. Triparshva, A trilateral pattern for renku, in Simply Haiku vol. 3, no. 2, 2005
- Yachimoto, Eiko. October Rain, the first English-language Rokku Renku, a Tomegaki, in Simply Haiku vol. 6, no. 3, 2008
See also
- Renga - the earlier collaborative poetry from which renku evolved
- Kigo - a season word or phrase used in many renku verses
- Matsuo Bashō - the 17th century Japanese poet who brought renku to a pinnacle of artistic achievement
- Winter Days - a 2003 animated film, based on one of the renku in the collection of the same name by the 17th-century Japanese poet Bashō
- Haikai - the genre which encompasses renku and related forms such as haiku, , haiga and haibun
External links
- renga platform's renga guide
- William J. Higginson's Renku_Home
- John Carley's Renku Reckoner
- How to Renga by Jane Reichhold
- Translations of Basho-school renku by Sean Price