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Murasaki Shikubu

    Murasaki Shikibu, romancière et poétesse japonaise, a servi comme dame de compagnie pendant la période Heian. Son héritage littéraire réside dans une œuvre reconnue comme l'un des romans les plus anciens et les plus significatifs de l'histoire. Elle a créé un chef-d'œuvre qui explore en profondeur les complexités de la nature humaine et la vie aristocratique de son époque. Son écriture se distingue par sa prose perspicace et ses représentations nuancées de personnages, qui continuent de résonner auprès des lecteurs.

    Arthur Waley
    Pillow Book of Sei Shonagon
    The Tale of Genji
    Noh Plays of Japan
    170 Chinese Poems
    • This book ranges from the melancholy to the cheerful, and to poems full of nostalgia: they essentially deal with concrete, rather than abstract, conceptions. Poets included are Ch'u Yuan, writing in 300 BC, Mei Sheng and Fu I, and Po Chu-I who wrote in the ninth century.

      170 Chinese Poems
    • Noh plays live on as a magnificent artistic heritage handed down from the high culture of medieval Japan. This book contains translations of nineteen plays and summaries of sixteen more, together with a revealing introductory essay that furnishes the background for an understanding and appreciation of the No as a highly significant dramatic form.

      Noh Plays of Japan
    • The Tale of Genji

      • 256pages
      • 9 heures de lecture
      3,7(9760)Évaluer

      Completed in the early 11th century, The Tale of Genji is considered the supreme masterpiece of Japanese prose literature, and one of the world's earliest novels. A work of great length, it comprises six parts, the first part of which (also called The Tale of Genji) is reprinted here. The exact origins of this remarkable saga of the nobility of Heian Japan remain somewhat obscured by time, although its author, Lady Shikibu Murasaki, presumably derived many of her insights into court life from her years of service with the royal family. The novel centers on the life and loves of the prince known as "the shining Genji." Far more than an exotic romance, however, the tale presents finely drawn characters in realistic situations, set against a richly embroidered tapestry of court life. Moreover, a wistful sense of nostalgia pervades the accounts of courtly intrigues and rivalries, resulting in an exquisitely detailed portrayal of a decaying aristocracy. Vibrant in its poetry and wordplay, subtle in its social and psychological observations, this work ranks in stature and significance with such Western classics as Cervantes' Don Quixote and Proust's Remembrance of Things Past. This inexpensive edition, featuring Arthur Waley's splendid translation of the first of the six-part series, offers readers a memorable taste of one of the world's first and greatest novels.

      The Tale of Genji