𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Cover of The Heart of Haiku

The Heart of Haiku

✍ Scribed by Jane Hirshfield


Year
2011
Tongue
English
Weight
29 KB
Category
Fiction

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Amazon.com Review

To hear Jane Hirshfield tell it, the 17th-century Japanese poetry scene was a cross between a Surrealist "exquisite corpse" session and a sake-lubed rap-battle circuit. But this is just one of the historically enlightening gems packed into her beautiful essay on Matsuo Bashō, the most famous purveyor of haiku. Packed with original translations, The Heart of Haiku is an elegant and reverent exploration of an itinerant artist who "wanted to renovate human vision by putting what he saw into a bare handful of mostly ordinary words, and… to renovate language by what he asked it to see." Absolutely no prior interest in poetry is necessary to take from Hirshfield's essay the inspiration to drop everything, walk out in to the wide world, open your eyes, and find out for yourself that "even the briefest form of poetry can have a wing-span of immeasurable breadth." --Jason Kirk

Product Description

In seventeenth-century Japan, the wandering poet Basho developed haiku, a seventeen-syllable poetic form now perhaps the most widely written type of poetry in the world. Haiku are practiced by poets, lovers, and schoolchildren, by β€œpolitical haiku” twitterers, by anyone who has the desire to pin preception and experience into a few quick phrases. This essay offers readers unparalleled insight into the living heart of haikuβ€”how haiku work and what they hold, and how to read through and into their images to find a full expression of human life and perceptions, sometimes profound, sometimes playful.

Jane Hirshfield is an award-winning poet and author of the now-classic Nine Gates: Entering the Mind of Poetry, as well as an equally classic book introducing earlier Japanese poetry, The Ink Dark Moon: Love Poems by Komachi and Shikibu, Women of the Ancient Japanese Court.


πŸ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


cover
✍ Jane Hirshfield πŸ“‚ Fiction πŸ“… 2011 🌐 English βš– 34 KB πŸ‘ 2 views

In seventeenth-century Japan, the wandering poet Basho developed haiku, a seventeen-syllable poetic form now perhaps the most widely written type of poetry in the world. Haiku are practiced by poets, lovers, and schoolchildren, by β€œpolitical haiku” twitterers, by anyone who has the desire to pin pre

cover
✍ Bramanti, Carlo πŸ“‚ Fiction πŸ“… 2012 🌐 Italian βš– 3 KB
cover
✍ Bramanti, Carlo πŸ“‚ Fiction πŸ“… 2012 🌐 Italian βš– 11 KB
cover
✍ Kern, Adam L πŸ“‚ Fiction πŸ“… 2018 πŸ› Penguin Books Ltd 🌐 English βš– 1 MB πŸ‘ 2 views

**The first Penguin anthology of Japanese haiku, in vivid new translations by Adam L. Kern.** Now a global poetry, the haiku was originally a Japanese verse form that flourished from the sixteenth to nineteenth centuries. Although renowned for its brevity, usually running three lines long in sevent