Description

Book Synopsis

The Routledge Global Haiku Reader provides a historical overview and comprehensive examination of haiku across the world in numerous languages, poetic movements, and cultural contexts. Offering an extensive critical perspective, this volume provides leading essays by poets and scholars who explore haiku's various global developments, demonstrating the form's complex and sometimes contradictory manifestations from the twentieth century to the present.

The sixteen chapters are carefully organized into categories that reflect the salient areas of practice and study: Haiku in Transit, Haiku and Social Consciousness, Haiku and Experimentation, and The Future of Global Haiku. An insightful introduction surveys haiku's influence beyond Japan and frames the collection historically and culturally, questioning commonly held assumptions about haiku and laying the groundwork for new ways of seeing the form. Haiku's elusiveness, its resistance to definition, is partly what keeps it

Trade Review

"This wide-ranging and imaginatively organized collection includes articles by most of the leading practitioners and theorists of global haiku today. It provides a good view of the state of the art now and a sense of how it has developed over the last decades. Highly recommended!" —Janine Beichman, Professor Emerita, Daitō Bunka University

"This book is a marvel of ideas, debates, scholarly investigations and inspired readings of the phenomenon of the global haiku. These essays show, dramatically, that this tiny poetic form is marked by its capaciousness and by its tenacious hold on the attention of contemporary poets across the world. The haiku’s apparently simple form teases, baffles, and metamorphoses under the varied lights these essays throw on it. Whether the haiku is a mirror (possibly even an x-ray) of its cultural moment, whether it is a dissident form or a sentimental craft best left to amateurs and siloed communities—are the kinds of questions debated here with passion and precision. As a poet, this is the kind of talking-about-poetry that I yearn to read. The point of this book, though, is not to find answers to whether haiku is a global movement or a local movement, a deeply misunderstood Japanese art-form or a ‘spirit’ that all poets can share, but it is to understand and explore the meanings, ideas, values and desires that inhere in such questions. It is that rare event, a scholarly book that will be taken up gratefully by general readers, students, and poets themselves." —Kevin Brophy, Emeritus Professor, University of Melbourne

"An instantly indispensable volume for anyone interested in haiku itself—its own knapsack-journey to far norths, souths, easts, wests, and to deeply human interiors—as well as for anyone interested in the development of current world poetry, whose course was profoundly and permanently altered by haiku's emergence in global translation." —Jane Hirshfield, author of The Heart of Haiku, Ledger, and Ten Windows: How Great Poems Transform the World

"This definitive compilation of essays by haikuists, critics and scholars is destined to transform the understanding and appreciation of the myriad modern offshoots—let alone traditional Japanese taproot—of the world’s most popular verseform. Surveying for the first time the influence of haiku on literary arts around the globe over the past century, from Modernism, Imagism and Surrealism to anti-war verse, indigenous people’s resistance poetry, ecological paean and so on, The Routledge Global Haiku Reader sows the seeds of a truly efflorescent epiphany." —Adam L. Kern, author of The Penguin Book of Haiku

"The Routledge Global Haiku Reader champions a geopolitically sophisticated approach to haiku studies that cuts through the distortions and exoticisms of the Japan/West binary in which the commentary has been entrenched. The essays span a compelling diversity of haiku situations: compositions in Taiwan and Singapore critical of Japan’s imperialism, by indigenous peoples of America, Japanese-Canadians, or poets in Latin America, Brazil, and Russia. This curiosity, this awareness and exploration of the layered factors of race, myth, and politics as they give impetus to and occasion meaning for haiku poetry is what makes this volume so fresh, so new, and so necessary. This collection blends the dispositions of both poets and scholars to create a commentary that is rigorously informed while insistent upon haiku as a living, active practice that has a present and future." —Arthur Mitchell, Associate Professor, Macalester College



Table of Contents

List of Contributors

List of Permissions

Acknowledgments

Introduction

I Haiku in Transit

1 Beyond the Haiku Moment: Bashō, Buson, and Modern Haiku Myths

2 Hearn, Bickerton, Hubbell: Translation and Definition

3 Reading an Evening Breeze: Buson’s Hokku in Translation

II Haiku and Social Consciousness

4 A Second-Class Art: On Contemporary Haiku

5 From the 2.26 Incident to the Atomic Bombs: Haiku During the Asia-Pacific War

6 New Rising Haiku: The Evolution of Modern Japanese Haiku and the Haiku Persecution Incident

7 Translations and Migrations of the Poetic Diary: Roy Kiyooka’s Wheels

III Haiku and Experimentation

8 Ezra Pound, Yone Noguchi, and Imagism

9 Haiku as a Western Genre: Fellow-Traveler of Modernism

10 Marking Time in Native America: Haiku, Elegy, Survival

11 The Disjunctive Dragonfly: A Study of Disjunctive Method and Definitions in Contemporary English-Language Haiku

IV The Future of Global Haiku

12 Non-Japanese Haiku Today

13 One Hundred Bridges, One Hundred Traditions in Haiku

14 In the Shade of the Cherry Blossoms: The Reception of Haiku in Post-Soviet Russia

15 From Haiku to the Short Poem: Bridging the Divide 16 Future of World Haiku

V Afterword

Afterword

Bibliography

Index

The Routledge Global Haiku Reader

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    A Paperback by James Shea, Grant Caldwell

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      View other formats and editions of The Routledge Global Haiku Reader by James Shea

      Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
      Publication Date: 6/30/2023 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781032272658, 978-1032272658
      ISBN10: 1032272651
      Also in:
      Poetry

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      The Routledge Global Haiku Reader provides a historical overview and comprehensive examination of haiku across the world in numerous languages, poetic movements, and cultural contexts. Offering an extensive critical perspective, this volume provides leading essays by poets and scholars who explore haiku's various global developments, demonstrating the form's complex and sometimes contradictory manifestations from the twentieth century to the present.

      The sixteen chapters are carefully organized into categories that reflect the salient areas of practice and study: Haiku in Transit, Haiku and Social Consciousness, Haiku and Experimentation, and The Future of Global Haiku. An insightful introduction surveys haiku's influence beyond Japan and frames the collection historically and culturally, questioning commonly held assumptions about haiku and laying the groundwork for new ways of seeing the form. Haiku's elusiveness, its resistance to definition, is partly what keeps it

      Trade Review

      "This wide-ranging and imaginatively organized collection includes articles by most of the leading practitioners and theorists of global haiku today. It provides a good view of the state of the art now and a sense of how it has developed over the last decades. Highly recommended!" —Janine Beichman, Professor Emerita, Daitō Bunka University

      "This book is a marvel of ideas, debates, scholarly investigations and inspired readings of the phenomenon of the global haiku. These essays show, dramatically, that this tiny poetic form is marked by its capaciousness and by its tenacious hold on the attention of contemporary poets across the world. The haiku’s apparently simple form teases, baffles, and metamorphoses under the varied lights these essays throw on it. Whether the haiku is a mirror (possibly even an x-ray) of its cultural moment, whether it is a dissident form or a sentimental craft best left to amateurs and siloed communities—are the kinds of questions debated here with passion and precision. As a poet, this is the kind of talking-about-poetry that I yearn to read. The point of this book, though, is not to find answers to whether haiku is a global movement or a local movement, a deeply misunderstood Japanese art-form or a ‘spirit’ that all poets can share, but it is to understand and explore the meanings, ideas, values and desires that inhere in such questions. It is that rare event, a scholarly book that will be taken up gratefully by general readers, students, and poets themselves." —Kevin Brophy, Emeritus Professor, University of Melbourne

      "An instantly indispensable volume for anyone interested in haiku itself—its own knapsack-journey to far norths, souths, easts, wests, and to deeply human interiors—as well as for anyone interested in the development of current world poetry, whose course was profoundly and permanently altered by haiku's emergence in global translation." —Jane Hirshfield, author of The Heart of Haiku, Ledger, and Ten Windows: How Great Poems Transform the World

      "This definitive compilation of essays by haikuists, critics and scholars is destined to transform the understanding and appreciation of the myriad modern offshoots—let alone traditional Japanese taproot—of the world’s most popular verseform. Surveying for the first time the influence of haiku on literary arts around the globe over the past century, from Modernism, Imagism and Surrealism to anti-war verse, indigenous people’s resistance poetry, ecological paean and so on, The Routledge Global Haiku Reader sows the seeds of a truly efflorescent epiphany." —Adam L. Kern, author of The Penguin Book of Haiku

      "The Routledge Global Haiku Reader champions a geopolitically sophisticated approach to haiku studies that cuts through the distortions and exoticisms of the Japan/West binary in which the commentary has been entrenched. The essays span a compelling diversity of haiku situations: compositions in Taiwan and Singapore critical of Japan’s imperialism, by indigenous peoples of America, Japanese-Canadians, or poets in Latin America, Brazil, and Russia. This curiosity, this awareness and exploration of the layered factors of race, myth, and politics as they give impetus to and occasion meaning for haiku poetry is what makes this volume so fresh, so new, and so necessary. This collection blends the dispositions of both poets and scholars to create a commentary that is rigorously informed while insistent upon haiku as a living, active practice that has a present and future." —Arthur Mitchell, Associate Professor, Macalester College



      Table of Contents

      List of Contributors

      List of Permissions

      Acknowledgments

      Introduction

      I Haiku in Transit

      1 Beyond the Haiku Moment: Bashō, Buson, and Modern Haiku Myths

      2 Hearn, Bickerton, Hubbell: Translation and Definition

      3 Reading an Evening Breeze: Buson’s Hokku in Translation

      II Haiku and Social Consciousness

      4 A Second-Class Art: On Contemporary Haiku

      5 From the 2.26 Incident to the Atomic Bombs: Haiku During the Asia-Pacific War

      6 New Rising Haiku: The Evolution of Modern Japanese Haiku and the Haiku Persecution Incident

      7 Translations and Migrations of the Poetic Diary: Roy Kiyooka’s Wheels

      III Haiku and Experimentation

      8 Ezra Pound, Yone Noguchi, and Imagism

      9 Haiku as a Western Genre: Fellow-Traveler of Modernism

      10 Marking Time in Native America: Haiku, Elegy, Survival

      11 The Disjunctive Dragonfly: A Study of Disjunctive Method and Definitions in Contemporary English-Language Haiku

      IV The Future of Global Haiku

      12 Non-Japanese Haiku Today

      13 One Hundred Bridges, One Hundred Traditions in Haiku

      14 In the Shade of the Cherry Blossoms: The Reception of Haiku in Post-Soviet Russia

      15 From Haiku to the Short Poem: Bridging the Divide 16 Future of World Haiku

      V Afterword

      Afterword

      Bibliography

      Index

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