Origin
During the Heian Period, prominent families often collected and compiled their poems in a family collection, or '' kashū''. It is likely that Fujiwara no Kaneie, her husband, asked the Mother of Michitsuna to create such a collection for their family. However, because she decided to add her own experiences along with the poems that she and Kaneie exchanged, ''Kagerō Nikki'' emerged.Shirane From the outset, the Mother of Michitsuna reveals her concerns by exploring the reality of her condition. It is commonly believed that Michitsuna’s Mother began writing the work in around 971, when she was facing one of her marriage crises.Story
Sonja Arntzen argued that the work also functions as a record of the death of Michitsuna’s Mother’s marriage and her struggle to find a reason for living. ''Kagerō Nikki'' unfolds around the principal relationship between Michitsuna’s Mother and her husband, Fujiwara no Kaneie, while also placing a hefty emphasis on the author’s other social relationships, such that between herself, her son, and later on her adopted daughter. The diary entries detail events of particular emotional significance, such as when Kaneie visits other women while she stays at home taking care of their son ("the boy"). The Mother of Michitsuna's deep feelings for Kaneie are apparent in the way her words take on a tone of inner anguish as Kaneie's visits dwindle. In an attempt to find solace, the Mother of Michitsuna makes pilgrimages to temples and mountains of religious importance. She often expresses her desire to become a nun, but the effect that act would have on her son’s future plagues her mind and prevents her from ever taking Buddhist vows. Towards the end of the diary, she finally reconciles herself to her separation from Kaneie, and determines to devote herself to caring for her son and her adopted daughter. The story ends with Michitsuna’s mother watching the festival of the souls’ return in the new year, and she hears a knock on her door during the late night. The visitor’s identity is never disclosed in the work.Style
''Kagerō Nikki'' is said to be a diary, but it is "written in a mixture of styles; the first half characterized more by memoir, the latter half by day-to-day entry."Watanabe and Bowring The amount of time that passes between events is sometimes weeks or months. The Mother of Michitsuna is credited with creating "a new form of self-expression and psychological exploration that expanded the potential of kana prose writing and influenced subsequent woman's writing, including ''Marriage customs
''Kagerō Nikki'' is the first piece of literature in which Heian social relations and customs are clearly drawn out.McCullough, 1967 The marriage customs in Japan at the time revolved around the idea of "duolocal residence", in which the husband lived in a separate house while the wife stayed at her parents’ residence. Although there was not a structured procedure for divorce, the stoppage of visits signaled the end of a relationship. In expressing her frustration with this system, the Mother of Michitsuna provides valuable insight into the life of married couples during the Heian period. There was also noAuthor
Life
Born in 935 as the daughter of a provincial governor, Fujiwara no Tomoyasu, the Mother of Michitsuna was a lower- to mid-level member of the aristocratic class. In 954, at the age of nineteen, she married Fujiwara no Kaneie (929-990), who had recently attained the position of captain of the Right Guards. Kaneie later became the Minister of the Right and Regent after his daughter gave birth to Emperor En'yū's son.Kodansha> Although Kaneie continued to climb the social hierarchy, the Mother of Michitsuna’s position as a secondary wife and mother of only one child left her in an unstable social position. Her tenuous relations with Kaneie drove her to consider becoming a nun, but her son and others in her family convinced her to remain in the secular world. She later adopted a daughter of Kaneie's by another woman. Not long after that, the Mother of Michitsuna's sixteen-year-long marriage came to an end. According to her diary, the Mother of Michitsuna devoted her life to her children, and Michitsuna later was able to attain the position of Major Counselor.Poems
The Mother of Michitsuna was known for her skill in waka, classical thirty-one-syllable poems, as indicated by the inclusion of some of her poems in Fujiwara no Teika's anthology '' Ogura Hyakunin Isshu'' (or ''One Hundred Poets, One Hundred Poems'', c. 1235) and in the third imperial waka anthology '' Shūi Wakashū''. With her expertise on waka, Michitsuna’s Mother composed poems that facilitated social relationships and also put a stop to others. Besides making compositions using her own name, she also wrote poems on behalf of her husband and her son in order to help them advance in social hierarchy and engage in courtship, demonstrating her artistic talent as a skilled poet. In Book 3 of ''Kagerō Nikki'', Michitsuna asks his mother to create poems that can help him court the woman that he was trying to pursue. Another instance was when Michitsuna’s Mother passed on her knowledge of literary excellence by teaching her adopted daughter calligraphy and waka. In addition, to reject the advances of an older man who was trying to court her daughter, the author also produced poems in response to his courtship.Marriage Politics
Michitsuna’s Mother lived during the age of monogatari, or “tale” or “romance” literature. While this is so, the author depicts her life story as one that does not have its own happy ending. Instead, she writes about the realities of marriage during her time—one that is driven by politics. While both sons and daughters are important to marriage politics, women are regarded as having a more crucial role to this system as they are regarded as the bearers of the next generation. This is the reason why Michitsuna’s mother bemoaned having a son instead of a daughter in Book 3.Legacy
In a society in whichSee also
* Heian literature * List of Japanese classical textsNotes
Bibliography
*Shirane, Haruo, ed. ''Traditional Japanese Literature: An Anthology, Beginnings to 1600.'' New York: Columbia UP, 2007, ISBN 9780231136976. *Watanabe, Minoru; Richard Bowring. "Style and Point of View in the Kagero Nikki."''Journal of Japanese Studies'', Vol. 10, No.2. (Summer, 1984), pp. 365–384. . *McCullough, William H."Japanese Marriage Institutions in the Heian Period".''Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies'', Vol.27 (1967), pp. 103–167. . *"Fujiwara no Kaneie." ''Kodansha Encyclopedia of Japan.'' Online ed. 1993. *Arntzen, Sonja. ''The Kagerō Diary: A Woman’s Autobiographical Text from Tenth-Century Japan''. University of Michigan Press. 2020. doi:10.1353/book.77824. *Akiyama, Ken. “Ōchō Joryū Bungaku no Sekai”. ''Tokyo: Tokyo Daigaku Shuppankai'', pp. 209. 1972. *Pigeot, Jacqueline. “From the Kagerō no Nikki to the Genji Monogatari”. ''Cipango- French Journal of Japanese Studies nline', Vol. 3. 2014. https://doi.org/10.4000/cjs.687 {{DEFAULTSORT:Kagero Nikki Late Old Japanese texts Diaries of the Heian period 10th-century Japanese books