From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Okikaze-shū (興風集), is a Japanese anthology of waka poetry. It is the personal anthology ( kashū) of Fujiwara no Okikaze. It is one of the Sanjūroku-nin Shū (三十六人集).

It was put together by an unknown compiler sometime after the mid-tenth century and survives in three variant textual traditions. It incorporates poems taken from the first two imperial anthologies, as well as a number of poems from an unknown source. Later imperial anthologies attributed poems to Okikaze based on their inclusion in this collection.

Compiler and date

The Okikaze-shū is a personal collection ( kashū) of the waka of the 10th-century poet Fujiwara no Okikaze. [1] It was not personally compiled by Okikaze, but by a later, unknown compiler, [1] in the mid- or late- Heian period. [1]

Textual tradition

The Okikaze-shū has three distinct textual lines, but scholars consider them to have originated from a single Urtext. [1]

Line 1 is the rufubon (common) text, which was printed as part of the Kasen Kashū during the Shōhō era (the Shōhō-ban Kasen Kashū, 正保版歌仙歌集) and includes 52 poems. [1] The last of these poems, however, is an interpolation (他本歌 tahon-ka) from the Gosenshū. [1] Line 2 is represented by a manuscript traditionally attributed to Bōmon-no-tsubone [ ja], and includes 53 poems. [1] Line 3 is represented by the edition included in the Nishihonganji-bon Sanjūroku-nin Shū (the Nishi Hongan-ji text), and includes 57 poems. [1] Lines 1 and 2 more closely resemble each other than either resembles Line 3. [1]

There is also a surviving fragmentary text, the so-called Fujiwara no Okikaze Shū (藤原興風集). [1]

Contents

All three textual lines of the Okikaze-shū are composed of two sections, [1] the first of which consists of poems borrowed from the Kokinshū and the Gosenshū, [1] the latter sections being poems collected by an unknown compiler. [1] The poems that were attributed to Okikaze by the Shinkokinshū and later imperial anthologies were all taken from this latter section. [1]

Facsimiles and modern editions

Facsimile editions include the Fukkoku Nihon Koten Bungakukan, the Gosho-bon Sanjūrokunin-shū, the Sanjūrokunin Kashū and the Nishihonganji-bon Sanjūrokunin Kashū. [1]

Modern printed editions include those of the Gunsho Ruijū, the Shoku Kokka Taikan (a supplement to the Kokka Taikan) and the Katsura no Miya Sōsho Vol. 1. [1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Okumura 1983, p. 469.

Works cited

  • Okumura, Tsuneya (1983). "Okikaze-shū". Nihon Koten Bungaku Daijiten 日本古典文学大辞典 (in Japanese). Vol. 1. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten. p. 469. OCLC  11917421.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Okikaze-shū (興風集), is a Japanese anthology of waka poetry. It is the personal anthology ( kashū) of Fujiwara no Okikaze. It is one of the Sanjūroku-nin Shū (三十六人集).

It was put together by an unknown compiler sometime after the mid-tenth century and survives in three variant textual traditions. It incorporates poems taken from the first two imperial anthologies, as well as a number of poems from an unknown source. Later imperial anthologies attributed poems to Okikaze based on their inclusion in this collection.

Compiler and date

The Okikaze-shū is a personal collection ( kashū) of the waka of the 10th-century poet Fujiwara no Okikaze. [1] It was not personally compiled by Okikaze, but by a later, unknown compiler, [1] in the mid- or late- Heian period. [1]

Textual tradition

The Okikaze-shū has three distinct textual lines, but scholars consider them to have originated from a single Urtext. [1]

Line 1 is the rufubon (common) text, which was printed as part of the Kasen Kashū during the Shōhō era (the Shōhō-ban Kasen Kashū, 正保版歌仙歌集) and includes 52 poems. [1] The last of these poems, however, is an interpolation (他本歌 tahon-ka) from the Gosenshū. [1] Line 2 is represented by a manuscript traditionally attributed to Bōmon-no-tsubone [ ja], and includes 53 poems. [1] Line 3 is represented by the edition included in the Nishihonganji-bon Sanjūroku-nin Shū (the Nishi Hongan-ji text), and includes 57 poems. [1] Lines 1 and 2 more closely resemble each other than either resembles Line 3. [1]

There is also a surviving fragmentary text, the so-called Fujiwara no Okikaze Shū (藤原興風集). [1]

Contents

All three textual lines of the Okikaze-shū are composed of two sections, [1] the first of which consists of poems borrowed from the Kokinshū and the Gosenshū, [1] the latter sections being poems collected by an unknown compiler. [1] The poems that were attributed to Okikaze by the Shinkokinshū and later imperial anthologies were all taken from this latter section. [1]

Facsimiles and modern editions

Facsimile editions include the Fukkoku Nihon Koten Bungakukan, the Gosho-bon Sanjūrokunin-shū, the Sanjūrokunin Kashū and the Nishihonganji-bon Sanjūrokunin Kashū. [1]

Modern printed editions include those of the Gunsho Ruijū, the Shoku Kokka Taikan (a supplement to the Kokka Taikan) and the Katsura no Miya Sōsho Vol. 1. [1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Okumura 1983, p. 469.

Works cited

  • Okumura, Tsuneya (1983). "Okikaze-shū". Nihon Koten Bungaku Daijiten 日本古典文学大辞典 (in Japanese). Vol. 1. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten. p. 469. OCLC  11917421.

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