Utsubo Kubota
Utsubo Kubota | |
---|---|
Native name | 窪田 空穂 |
Born | Wada Village, Higashichikuma District, Nagano Prefecture, Japan | June 8, 1877
Died | April 12, 1967 | (aged 89)
Occupation | poet |
Genre | tanka poetry |
Literary movement | Naturalism |
Utsubo Kubota (窪田 空穂 Kubota Utsubo; 1877–1967) was a Japanese tanka poet. He also wrote poetry in other forms, as well as prose fiction and non-fiction critical and scholarly works on Japanese classical literature. He was a lecturer at Waseda University.
Biography
[edit]Utsubo Kubota was born on 8 June 1877.[1] He was born in Wada Village, Higashichikuma District (modern-day Matsumoto City), Nagano Prefecture.[2] His real name was Tsūji Kubota (窪田 通治 Kubota Tsūji).[2]
He graduated the School of Letters at the Tōkyō Senmon Gakkō (present-day Waseda University).[2] After working as a reporter for various newspapers and magazines,[2] he returned to Waseda to become a lecturer on literature.[2]
He died on 12 April 1967.[1]
Writings
[edit]Kubota was a leading poet of the Japanese Naturalist school.[3] He wrote many tanka,[3] as well as poems of other forms such as the chōka.[3]
He first came to the attention of the poet Tekkan Yosano for a tanka he published in the magazine Bunko in 1900.[2] Early in his literary career he published shintaishi (poetry in modern forms) and tanka in Tekkan's important magazine Myōjō, but left after less than a year.[2]
In 1905 he published the anthology Mahiruno (まひる野).[2] It was also around this time that he took an interest in the philosophy of Naturalism[2] and began writing prose fiction,[2] researching classical Japanese literature,[1] and engaging in literary criticism.[2]
1911 saw the publication of his short story collection Rohen (炉辺).[2]
In 1912 he published Utsubo Kashū (空穂歌集),[2] with the intention of distancing himself from tanka,[2] but he continued to write them throughout his career.[3]
Reception
[edit]Literary historian and critic Donald Keene wrote of Kubota that he "attained his greatest distinction as a poet relatively late in life", contrasting him in this sense to the poets associated with the magazine Myōjō.[3] He went on to note that "[Kubota's] poetry often has a perfection of diction that defies translation, though his themes and imagery are less compelling" than other Naturalist poets.[3]
References
[edit]Works cited
[edit]- Keene, Donald (1999) [1984]. A History of Japanese Literature, Vol. 4: Dawn to the West – Japanese Literature of the Modern Era (Poetry, Drama, Criticism) (paperback ed.). New York, NY: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-11435-6.
- Mukawa, Chūichi (1994). "Kubota Utsubo" 窪田空穂. Encyclopedia Nipponica (in Japanese). Shogakukan. Retrieved 2017-11-26.