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Comrade loves of the samurai

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Saikaku Ihara, under the pseudonym Hirayama Togo, presents a collection of stories about homosexual love between samurai lords of medieval Japan and the young men who served them: pages, samurai apprentices, secretaries, general assistants, or even young men living outside their palaces. These stories illustrate the normality of these practices before the Meiji era, a time when changes were instituted, leading to the silencing of homosexual practices. Another reason for this silence is attributed to the arrival of foreigners in Japan, who viewed homosexuality unfavorably. The love stories among samurai are always imbued with tragic romance and death (suicide through the famous hara-kiri) as an honorable solution to any sentimental conflict. Although the stories may initially seem somewhat simple, they are not to be considered trivial, as within them one can find deep symbols of philosophical thought, certain traditional aspects, and generally part of the cultural idiosyncrasy of the Japanese of that time.

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Comrade loves of the samurai, Ihara Saikaku

Sprache
Erscheinungsdatum
1972
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(Hardcover)
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Titel
Comrade loves of the samurai
Sprache
Englisch
Autor*innen
Ihara Saikaku
Erscheinungsdatum
1972
Einband
Hardcover
Seitenzahl
134
ISBN10
0804810249
ISBN13
9780804810241
Reihe
Bewertung
3,1 von 5 Sternen
Beschreibung
Saikaku Ihara, under the pseudonym Hirayama Togo, presents a collection of stories about homosexual love between samurai lords of medieval Japan and the young men who served them: pages, samurai apprentices, secretaries, general assistants, or even young men living outside their palaces. These stories illustrate the normality of these practices before the Meiji era, a time when changes were instituted, leading to the silencing of homosexual practices. Another reason for this silence is attributed to the arrival of foreigners in Japan, who viewed homosexuality unfavorably. The love stories among samurai are always imbued with tragic romance and death (suicide through the famous hara-kiri) as an honorable solution to any sentimental conflict. Although the stories may initially seem somewhat simple, they are not to be considered trivial, as within them one can find deep symbols of philosophical thought, certain traditional aspects, and generally part of the cultural idiosyncrasy of the Japanese of that time.