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    japanese poetry

    Explore " japanese poetry" with insightful episodes like "John Stevens, a lifetime of publishing", "Liza Dalby on Geisha, Kimonos, and Translating Setouchi Jakucho's "Places"", "American Haiku by Jack Kerouac", "In Love as in Tourism by Xiao Yue Shan" and "Japanese History 5/13 The Nara Period" from podcasts like ""Books on Asia", "Books on Asia", "Words in the Air", "Words in the Air" and "In Credible Discourse"" and more!

    Episodes (6)

    John Stevens, a lifetime of publishing

    John Stevens, a lifetime of publishing

    This week author and translator John Stevens joins us from Hawaii. Stevens has penned many books over his long career, mainly dealing with Japanese martial arts, poetry, and biography.

    A book should be enlightening for the writer, and for the people reading it.” —John Stevens

    Amy starts off the show mentioning the books of Stevens that she has read: The Marathon Monks of Mt. Hiei; The Essence of Aikido: Spiritual Teachings of Morihei Ueshiba; Dew Drops on a Lotus Leaf: Zen Poems of Ryokan; and Mountain Tasting: Haiku and Journals of Santoka Taneda. Yet that is only a fraction of the works that Stevens has produced over his life.

    He explains his translation style and how he manages to capture the essence of haiku in his translations. He names Arthur Waley as an exemplar of the craft.

    “A good translation has to be good literature, fine literature."

    Stevens talks about his first book, One Robe, One Bowl (Tuttle Publishing).

    His second book was Mountain Tasting: Haiku and Journals of Santoka Taneda (White Pine Press). Of his books on aikido, he says the most popular has been The Art of Peace: Teachings of the Founder of Aikido (Shambhala), which has over 2,300 ratings on Amazon and has been further translated into over 20 languages.

    Amy reads a poem from Dew Drops on a Lotus Leaf (Shambhala), which prompts Stevens to talk about his passion for poetry and translation:

    "If you don’t feel the passion and the poignancy, then it’s not a translation.”

    When talking about the writing process:

    "Writing a book should be enlightening, for both you writing it and for the people reading it," says Stevens. "My writing was an extension of my [Aikido] practice.”

    Other popular books by Stevens are The Essence of Aikido: Spiritual Teachings of Morihei Ueshiba (Kodansha International), and The Marathon Monks of Mt. Hiei (Echo Point Books & Media).

    Stevens tells a story of going to Sendai to meet a master Aikido teacher, Shirata-sensei, in Yamagata. "I’d arrive at the dojo, no one was there. He was there. He was never not there. And he was sitting, meditating. I learned something: that if you’re a teacher, you’ve got to be there all the time.”

    The author and translator also talks about his book Lust for Enlightenment (Shambhala) and why it was controversial, as well as Tantra of Tachikawa Ryu: Secret Sex Teachings of the Buddha (Stone Bridge Press).

    More recently, Stevens has been working with art exhibitions and writing exhibition catalogues. He is currently working on a display in Spain centered around the Kyoto poet and Buddhist nun Rengetsu at the Gothic Monastery of Pedralbes in Barcelona until May 27, 2022. If you need a primer before you go, get a copy of Stevens's Rengetsu: Life & Poetry of Lotus Moon (Echo Point Books & Media). The Barcelona exhibit, which has been open to the public since November 2021 and is titled "La lluna de Lotus" in Spanish, includes 36 ceramic pieces and 30 paintings and calligraphy by the female artist. 

    Lastly, Amy asks Stevens what his favorite books on Japan are:

    Poetry and Zen: Letters and Uncollected writings of R.H. Blyth by R.H. Blyth and Norman Waddell
    Zen and Japanese Culture by Daisetzu T. Suzuki
    The Unknown Craftsman: A Japanese Insight into Beauty by Soetsu Yanagi and Bernard Leach

    Don't miss John Stevens next book The Art of Budoh: Painting and Calligraphy by Japanese Masters (Shambhala, Dec 2022).

    More Books by John Stevens:

    Seeing Zen (Floating World Editions)
    Sacred Calligraphy of the East (Echo Point Books & Media)
    Extraordinary Zen Masters; A Maverick, A Master of Masters, and a Wondering Poet (Echo Point Books & Media)
    Budo: Teachings of the Founder of Aikido (Kodansha USA)
    The Secret Teachings of Aikido (Kodansha USA)
    The Heart of Aikido; The Philosophy of Takemusu Aiki (Kodansha International)
    Wild Ways: Ikkyu (White Pine Press)

    Philosophy of Aikido (Echo Point Books & Media)

    And many, many more!

    Liza Dalby on Geisha, Kimonos, and Translating Setouchi Jakucho's "Places"

    Liza Dalby on Geisha, Kimonos, and Translating Setouchi Jakucho's "Places"

    In this episode of the Books on Asia Podcast, sponsored by Stone Bridge Press, host Amy Chavez talks with anthropologist, shamisen player, author, and translator Liza Dalby about her books and her new translation of the recently deceased novelist cum Buddhist nun Jakuchō Setouchi's memoir "Places."

    Liza is author of the Geisha, Kimono: Fashioning Culture, East Wind Melts the Ice: A Guide to Serenity Through the Seasons, and  Hidden Buddhas: A Novel of Karma and Chaos. Her previous translations include Little Songs of Geisha: Traditional Japanese Ko-Uta.

    Amy and Liza talk about Liza's long career writing about Japan, starting with Geisha and how that world of women changed along with the modernization of Japanese society, why the geisha survive today, and the meaning of the word "kimono." They also discuss different kinds of kimono, the difference between the yukata (often called a "summer kimono") and a robe. Liza lets us in on the controversy behind the original cover of Tale of Murasaki and how and why she convinced the publisher to change it to the current one.

    They also talk about the controversies behind Setouchi Jakuchō, how Liza came to translate her autobiography, and how she missed a chance to talk to Jakuchō during a visit to Kyōto.

    Lastly, Liza reveals her  favorite books on Japan:

    Visit Liza Dalby's website.

    The Books on Asia Podcast is sponsored by Stone Bridge Press. Check out their books on Japan at the publisher's website.

    Japanese History 5/13 The Nara Period

    Japanese History 5/13 The Nara Period

    Today we continue our journey through the story of the Japanese islands

    There are several specific topics that I would like to take a deeper dive into but I want to make sure that we have some basic ground covered before we get to deep into it.

    Throughout these 13 episodes, We will cover the entire span of Japanese history, from the early hunter-gatherers of the Jomon to the Newest Era, Reiwa. This will introduce the general outline of Japanese  history for those who are not familiar and will begin to contextualize famous events and people

     

     

    Music Credits: 

    Opening: The Wind by Komiku 

    Closing: Escaping_like_Indiana_Jones by Komiku

     

    Janine Beichman on translating Japanese Haiku and Tanka

    Janine Beichman on translating Japanese Haiku and Tanka

    This episode starts out with Amy and Janine talking about Masaoka Shiki (1867-1902) and the poetic reforms that took place from 1868 during Japan's transition from the Edo to the Meiji period. It was a time when Shiki (and his friend Natsume Sōseki), was influenced by Western literary styles and culture. These effects are reflected in Shiki's haiku, tanka and prose. Beichman's literary biography Masaoka Shiki: His Life and Works (Cheng & Tsui Co, 2002) delves into Shiki's influence on poetry, his invention of the tanka series and the publication of his poetic diaries. Janine also discusses the differences between haiku and tanka (waka) and their variations.

    Janine then details her path to discovering feminist poet Yosano Akiko (1879-1942) and tells how she came to the decision to focus on this particular poet to write a literary biography. Embracing the Firebird: Yosano Akiko and the Birth of the Female Voice in Modern Japanese Poetry (Univ of Hawaii Press, 2002) is the result. Janine talks about Akiko and her relationship with nature in poetry and feminism. Beichman reads a poem from Yosano's collection "Tangled Hair" included in her book.

    See University of Hawaii Press for indexes for Embracing the Firebird:

    Introduction by the Author

    First Lines of Poems

    Next, Janine charts her relationship with poet Makoto Ooka, and how she started writing for his magazine which later led to him asking her to translate a book of his poems. The book was originally published by Catydid Press and later Kurodohan released a second English edition called Beneath the Sleepless Tossing of the Planets. Read a review by Christopher Blasdel of Sleepless Tossing of the Planets here.

    Janine also discusses Makoto Ōoka, how she became involved translating his poetry and how she chose which to poems to include in the anthology Ori Ori no Uta.

    Lastly, Janine reveals who her favorite Japanese poets and poetry books are.

    Unfortunately, Janine's book wasn't near release at the time of the podcast recording, but her latest endeavor is the translation of Well-Versed: Exploring Modern Japanese Haiku (Japan Library/JPIC, March 25, 2021). Read an excerpt.

    The Books on Asia Podcast is sponsored by Stone Bridge Press, publisher of fine books on Asia for over 30 years.

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