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"shÅmono"
Article
Interpretation of Du Fu’s Poetry by Medieval Japanese Zen Monks: On the “
ShÅmono
†抄物 of Du Fu’s Poetry
1
Yoshimura Hiromichi
J Sinogr Philol Leg
2025;1(1):71-90.
Published online March 31, 2025
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.63563/jspl.2025.005
Abstract
PDF
KaifÅ«sÅ
懷風藻 from the Nara period is the oldest surviving collection of Japanese
kanshi
漢詩. Its poems were in a formative stage, imitating the poetry of the Six Dynasties and early Tang periods. However, after the middle and later Heian period, distinctly Japanese forms of
kanshi
such as the seven-character regulated verse and
kudaishi
å¥é¡Œè©© began to emerge amidst the popularity of Bai Juyi’s poetry. During the Kamakura period, the practitioners of
kanshi
starkly shifted from aristocrats to Zen monks, marking the beginning of what is called
gozan bungaku
五山文å¸, which continued into the Muromachi period. During this time, the literature of the Song and Yuan dynasties—especially Su Shi and Huang Tingjian’s poetry from the Northern Song—was held in high regard, as well as the poetry of Du Fu, who greatly influenced them. Influenced by these three figures, Zen monks of the Muromachi period not only composed
kanshi
, but also gave lectures on their poetry and preserved their teachings in
shÅmono
. These
shÅmono
hold unique significance in the history of Japanese
kanshi
studies as the first interpretive works. This paper outlines the reception of Du Fu’s poetry up until the early era of
Gozan Bungaku
and then introduces four
shÅmono
on Du Fu’s poetry from the middle period and beyond.
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