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The Secret Island and the Enticing Flame
by Edwin A Cranston
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Cornell University East Asia Program
Weight: 0.4 pound
Dimension: H: 0.4 x L: 8.3 x W: 5.4 inches
ISBN 10: 193394742X
ISBN 13: 9781933947426
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Book Description:
The three essays in this book draw on the translator s work on love poetry--classical waka and the tanka of Yosano Akiko (1878-1942)- but also introduce the prose poems and free verse of a contemporary surrealist poet, Mizuno Ruriko, whose themes are childhood and the loss of innocence.

The Secret Island and the Enticing Flame: Worlds of Memory, Discovery, and Loss shows the translator of poetry experimenting with three different ways to present the results of his craft. In the Dark of the Year is an essay in sequencing. Cranston arranges translations of fifty love poems in the tanka form, ranging from the ancient chronicle Kojiki to the contemporary poet Tawara Machi, in an examination of desire, melancholy, and despair. The arrangement, inspired by the technique of association and progression, suggests an ongoing love story and limns the essence of the classical love tradition. Young Akiko: the Literary Debut of Yosano Akiko (1878-1942) adopts a biographical approach. Richly documented with the astonishing tanka of the young poet who burst on the literary scene in 1900, this essay updates the author s article originally published in 1977 in Literature East and West. Finally, the longest essay, The Dark at the Bottom of the Dish: Fishing for Myth in the Poetry of Mizuno Ruriko, shows Cranston working outside his usual box, on the poems of a contemporary surrealist whose deepest themes are childhood and loss of innocence. Mizuno, hitherto not well known outside Japan, is a master of the prose poem and free verse. Cranston s essay shows the translator searching for the mysterious power that draws him to a poetry quite different from any on which he has previously worked.


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