Araragi (magazine) explained

was a Japanese literary magazine active from 1908 to 1997.

History and profile

Araragi was established by Itō Sachio in 1908.[1] He was also the editor of the magazine until his death in 1913.[2] Shimagi Akahiko was the next editor of the magazine.[2]

it was a leading magazine of tanka (short poems). A group of poets who contributed to the magazine has come to be known as the Araragi school.

Originally, under the over-all direction of Itō, Chikashi Koizumi, Mokichi Saitō, Jun Ishiwara and others took turns as editors. Under Koizumi, a pattern of delayed or missing issues ensued, and in 1912 a schism with Saitō and others deepened, exacerbating the problem of erratic publication. 
Saitō complained of the wretched condition to, who became exasperated enough to travel from Nagano Prefecture to Tokyo, and the legal responsibility for editing temporarily passed from Koizumi to Saitō. In June 1914, thanks to close connections between Shimaki and Shigeo Iwanami, Iwanami Shoten began handling sales and distribution. In February of 1915 Shimaki became the editor and publisher, and a formal sales relationship with Iwanami Shoten was established on March 1st. Shimaki kept the accounts in order, started a buying club for artwork by a member of the group, the painter Hirafuku Hyakusui, and worked to expand membership. Saitō’s first collection of tanka, Shakkō ("Red Light") was a sensation and example of new trends in tanka, boosting the reputation of Araragi and increasing the number of copies printed. Shimaki's students such as and inherited his strict "drawing from nature" style, but this tended towards narrow formalism, resulting in Koizumi, Ishiwara, Shinobu Orikuchi and others withdrawing from Araragi and founding Nikkō[3] in 1924, together with Hakushū Kitahara, Yūgure Maeda, and others.

In the postwar period, Araragi continued to publish, and was shut down in December 1997.[4]

There are four successors to Araragi: Miyoshi Koichi, who published Araragi from 1993 until it ceased publication, began publishing Seinan (青南); other editors and contributors formed groups to publish Shin Araragi, Tanka 21st Century, and Araragi Ha.

Notes and References

  1. Book: J. Scott Miller. The A to Z of Modern Japanese Literature and Theater. 14 November 2014. 2010. Rowman & Littlefield. 978-0-8108-7615-6. 28.
  2. Web site: Joseph Koshimi. Japanese literature of the Shōwa period : a guide to Japanese reference and research materials. Center for Japanese Studies Publications. 14 November 2014.
  3. http://www.fujishuppan.co.jp/newbooks/日光【復刻版】-全10巻・別冊1/ 日光【復刻版】 全10巻・別冊1
  4. Web site: Guy Simser. An Interview with Saeko Ogi, tanka poet and translator in Australia. Simply Haiku Journal. 13 August 2015. Spring 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304045711/http://simplyhaikujournal.com/past-issues/simply-haiku-2011/spring-2011/features/interview-with-saeko-ogi.html. 4 March 2016. dead.