Editor | Ishikawa Takuboku |
---|---|
Categories | Literary magazine |
Frequency | Monthly |
First issue | January 1909 |
Final issue | December 1913 |
Company | Subaru (昴) |
Country | Japan |
Language | Japanese |
Subaru (スバル) was a literary magazine published monthly in Japan between January 1909 and December 1913. [1] [2] The name of the publisher was Subaru (昴), written in kanji as opposed to the magazine title written in katakana.
Subaru was the spiritual successor to the better-known and longer-running magazine Myōjō. [1] [2] It mainly focused on the publication of poetry and was known for its advocacy of the trend of romanticism in Japanese literature in the late Meiji period (1868 – 1912). [1] [2] It was priced at 30 sen (0.3 yen) and ultimately published 60 issues in total. [3] [4]
In 1909, after Myōjō ceased publication, Mori Ōgai [2] and a few other prominent Myōjō writers including Tekkan Yosano [2] and Akiko Yosano came together to publish a new magazine that would become Subaru. [4] Ishikawa Takuboku initially served as editor. [1] The magazine was noted for publishing works by Ishikawa, as well as Mokutaro Kinoshita, Kōtarō Takamura, Yoshii Isamu (1886 – 1960), and Hakushū Kitahara (the latter leaving Myōjō in January 1908 was one of the factors contributing to its going out of print [5]). [6] Anti- Naturalist and Romantic writings were most prominent, and writers known for having their works published in Subaru were known as Subaru-ists (スバル派, Subaru-ha).
Among the works Mori Ōgai published in the magazine were The Wild Geese, [2] Vita Sexualis, and Seinen. [1] Yoshii first published Sake hogai and Gogo san-ji in the magazine. [6] The complete run of Subaru was reprinted in facsimile in 1965 by the publishing house Rinsen Shoten. [4] [7]
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Editor | Ishikawa Takuboku |
---|---|
Categories | Literary magazine |
Frequency | Monthly |
First issue | January 1909 |
Final issue | December 1913 |
Company | Subaru (昴) |
Country | Japan |
Language | Japanese |
Subaru (スバル) was a literary magazine published monthly in Japan between January 1909 and December 1913. [1] [2] The name of the publisher was Subaru (昴), written in kanji as opposed to the magazine title written in katakana.
Subaru was the spiritual successor to the better-known and longer-running magazine Myōjō. [1] [2] It mainly focused on the publication of poetry and was known for its advocacy of the trend of romanticism in Japanese literature in the late Meiji period (1868 – 1912). [1] [2] It was priced at 30 sen (0.3 yen) and ultimately published 60 issues in total. [3] [4]
In 1909, after Myōjō ceased publication, Mori Ōgai [2] and a few other prominent Myōjō writers including Tekkan Yosano [2] and Akiko Yosano came together to publish a new magazine that would become Subaru. [4] Ishikawa Takuboku initially served as editor. [1] The magazine was noted for publishing works by Ishikawa, as well as Mokutaro Kinoshita, Kōtarō Takamura, Yoshii Isamu (1886 – 1960), and Hakushū Kitahara (the latter leaving Myōjō in January 1908 was one of the factors contributing to its going out of print [5]). [6] Anti- Naturalist and Romantic writings were most prominent, and writers known for having their works published in Subaru were known as Subaru-ists (スバル派, Subaru-ha).
Among the works Mori Ōgai published in the magazine were The Wild Geese, [2] Vita Sexualis, and Seinen. [1] Yoshii first published Sake hogai and Gogo san-ji in the magazine. [6] The complete run of Subaru was reprinted in facsimile in 1965 by the publishing house Rinsen Shoten. [4] [7]
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cite journal}}
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