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Tytuł:
戦争を<耐え忍ぶ心>へのアンチテーゼ—秋元松代の戯曲『常陸坊海尊』(1964)を中心にー
The Spirit to “Survive” the War – a Play by Akimoto Matsuyo, Hitachibō Kaison (Kaison, the Priest of Hitachi)
Autorzy:
Tateoka, Kumi
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1810782.pdf
Data publikacji:
2017
Wydawca:
Polskie Stowarzyszenie Badań Japonistycznych
Tematy:
Akimoto Matsuyo
Kaison
Yoshitsune
folklore
theater play
myth of the noble exile (kishuryūritan).
Opis:
Akimoto Matsuyo (1911–2001) is one of the few female playwrights of the Shōwa Period. Her master was Miyoshi Jūrō, a renowned figure of the proletarian theater. He taught Akimoto the art of detailed realism. Akimoto’s great fascination with folklore, an obvious influence of Yanagida Kunio, drove her meticulous fieldwork. In places forgotten and irrelevant to the main course of history, she explored the sensitivity of those in deep connection with local traditions and used this research in her plays. Her play Hitachibō Kaison (Kaison, the Priest of Hitachi) is based on a legend that featured Yoshitsune. Kaison first betrays his lord, later changes his life completely – goes about retelling his sins, and in the end refuses to eat and becomes a virtuous living incarnation of Buddha (ikibotoke). The story opens with the scene of Tokyo children being evacuated at the end of the Pacific War. The children unexpectedly become absorbed into the world of Kaison’s legend. The comeback of the folk magic theme, posing a contrast with postwar Japan’s modern rationalization, is a unique phenomenon in the literature of the late 1950’s. It also somehow relates to the interest in Japanese folklore and sensuality present in the works of the playwrights of the 1960’s, like Tarayama Shūji or Kara Jūrō. Akimoto, however, does not see Japanese folklore only in contrast to modernity. In her play Muraoka Iheijiden (The Life of Muraoka Iheiji, 1960) she describes a simple man from the countryside, Muraoka, who initially dedicates himself to helping women sold abroad to China and South-East Asia, but later, due to misguided patriotism, changes his approach and by the end abandons all the “deceived” women. In the play Kasabuta Shikibukō (Meditation on Our Lady of Scabs, 1969) Akimoto deals with the pain and suffering of the common people. Basing her story on folk beliefs glorifying the figure of Izumi Shikibu, Akimoto shows the suffering of a mother and a wife that both long for the recovery of a mentally handicapped man who lost his faculties due to a coal-mining accident. Although not explicitly, the play addresses the topic of the psychological construct of selfish patriotism that throughout the 20th century allowed Japan to slip further and further into military conflict starting with the Russo-Japanese War. After the wars were over it still brought suffering to people, who now became victims of a quasi-war, that is, the rapid economic development. In Muraoka Iheijiden the sincere, whole-hearted modern day love of the common countryside people towards their home areas, the neighborly love, all become abused by the power of the state. In Kasabuta Shikibukō, the anti-modern world of myth and folktale – with all its relations, including male-female relationships, eventually ends up twisted by the greed for power that comes with economic development (the national system). Both on the surface and in the inner depths of society, salvation (meaning to live like a human being) becomes an empty slogan (symbol), repeated by simple people devoid of any escape, whose only rescue is in the faith that salvation will come. The author shows it most vividly in one of the scenes from Hitachibō Kaison. The children who are beingevacuated from Tokyo start evoking the name of “Lord Kaison” (Kaison-sama) unaware of the meaning behind those words. In the article I would like to examine how theater plays portray the similarities between the belief in kishuryūritan tales glorifying the defeated, and the imperial system that supported Japanese wars during the era of militarism.
Źródło:
Analecta Nipponica; 2017, 7; 105-119
2084-2147
Pojawia się w:
Analecta Nipponica
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Norwidowska reinterpretacja mitu prometejskiego
Norwid’s reinterpretation of the Promethean myth
Autorzy:
Kłobukowski, Miłosz
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/16729575.pdf
Data publikacji:
2020-05-07
Wydawca:
Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II. Towarzystwo Naukowe KUL
Tematy:
Prometeusz
mit
ofiara
praca
język
interpretacja
mit „adamicki”
mit upadku
mit wygnania
Hezjod
Ajschylos
Norwid
Paul Ricoeur
René Girard
Promethidion
Rzecz o wolności słowa
Prometheus
myth
sacrifice
work
language
interpretation
“Adam’s myth” of the fall
myth of exile
Hesiod
Aeschylus
On Freedom of Speech
Opis:
The author’s aim is to reflect on one of the rudimentary myths constituting the European identity, that is the Promethean myth, and on its interpretation present in Norwid’s works. Kłobukowski states that the author of Promethidion interprets the story of the good Titan in a way that is different from that in which most poets of the 19th century Europe interpreted it, that is by referring to ancient sources of the myth in works by Hesiod, and not by Aeschylus; and that this interpretation has a character of a manifesto. At the same time Norwid, interpreting the story of Prometheus, enters a polemic with Western Romantics as well as with Mickiewicz and the poetic anthropology present in the main current of Romanticism, that was first of all based on such features as rebellion, autonomy of an individual, self-determination, or self-deification. The poet suggests a different vision of human subjectivity; he Christianizes the myth, at the same time doing the work of a comparatist and an anthropologist – comparing the figure of the Titan and the Biblical Adam (Promethidion), suggesting that it is not rebellion, but work is man’s true vocation. Norwid also interprets the phenomenon of the language and its history in the context of the Promethean myth, which he perceives as a myth of the fall (On Freedom of Speech). Kłobukowski also analyzes one of the most important mythemes from the story of Prometheus – that of sacrifice, that, according to Western Romantics, was connected with creating an individualist “I”. Norwid interprets the meaning of sacrifice in a different way – namely, as a phenomenon showing the fullness of humanity and acceptance of the imperfection of the human condition.
Źródło:
Studia Norwidiana; 2015, 33; 77-108
0860-0562
Pojawia się w:
Studia Norwidiana
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Schodzenie do Hadesu jako dramat wygnania. Na marginesie siedmiu sonetów do Persefony Jerzego Stanisława Sity
Descending to Hades as a Drama of Exile. In the Margin of Seven Sonnets to Persephone by Jerzy Stanisław Sito
Autorzy:
Guty, Zuzanna
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1887260.pdf
Data publikacji:
2014
Wydawca:
Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II. Towarzystwo Naukowe KUL
Tematy:
sonet
wygnanie
mit o Persefonie
demitologizacja
sonnet
exile
myth of Persephone
demythologization
Opis:
Autorka interpretuje cykl sonetów Stanisława Jerzego Sity jako dzieło podejmujące problem wygnania. Wskazuje na obecność warstwy mitu o Persefonie oraz na kreacje podmiotu lirycznego przeżywającego tę opowieść. Zdaniem badaczki Sito stosuje strategie demitologizacyjne mające na celu reinterpretację mitycznej opowieści. Autorka zauważa obecność odwołań biblijnych: wygnanie z raju, psalamiczne lamentacje, księga Ezechiela oraz słowa świętego Pawła oraz dialog z Sonetami krymskimi Adama Mickiewicza. Ponadto, wskazuje na paralele pomiędzy sytuacją podmiotu a sytuacją Persefony – życie jako wygnanie.
The author interprets the series of sonnets by Stanisław Jerzy Sito as a work that tackles the problem of exile. She points to the presence of the layer of the myth of Persephone and to the creations of the lyrical ego experiencing the tale. In the author’s opinion Sito uses demythologizing strategies aiming at reinterpretation of the mythical story. The author notices the presence of Biblical references: expulsion from Eden, Psalmic lamentations, the Book of Ezekiel and St Paul’s words as well as a dialogue with Adam Mickiewicz’s The Crimean Sonnets. Moreover, she point to parallels between the situation of the subject and that of Persephone – life as exile.
Źródło:
Roczniki Humanistyczne; 2014, 62, 1; 147-155
0035-7707
Pojawia się w:
Roczniki Humanistyczne
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
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