Myōjō Explained

Myōjō
Frequency:Monthly
Category:Literary magazine
Company:[1]
Firstdate:April 1900
Finaldate:November 1908
Country:Japan
Language:Japanese

was a monthly literary magazine published in Japan between April 1900 and November 1908. The name Myōjō can be translated as either Bright Star[2] or Morning Star.

History and profile

The magazine was established in 1900.[3] It was the organ of a poetry circle called Shinshisha (New Poetry Society) which had been founded by Yosano Tekkan in 1899. Myōjō was initially known for its development and promotion of a modernized version of the 31-syllable tanka poetry. Famous contributors such as Yosano Akiko, who also edited the magazine,[4] transformed the traditional poetry with a sensual style in the romantic movement.

Other important contributors included Hagiwara Sakutaro, Ishikawa Takuboku,, Kitahara Hakushu, Noguchi Yonejiro, Kinoshita Rigen, and Haruo Satō. The magazine was advised by Mori Ōgai, Ueda Bin and Baba Kocho, with Yosano Tekkan remaining as editor-in-chief of the publication.

Myōjō gradually transformed itself from purely tanka poetry, to a sophisticated journal promoting the visual arts and western style poetry as well. It is regarded as having a crucial influence on the development of Japanese poetry and literature in the early 20th century.

Myōjō was short lived, as internal dissension dissolved the Shinshisha literary circle. Many of its original members helped create a successor literary journal, Subaru (The Pleiades). Myōjō was revived from 1921–1927 by Tekkan, and again from 1947–1949.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 明星. Furukawa. Kiyohiko. コトバンク. Shogakukan. Japanese. 2020-11-16. https://archive.today/20201116150603/https://kotobank.jp/word/%E6%98%8E%E6%98%9F-24435. 16 November 2020. live.
  2. Book: R. Victoria Arana. Encyclopedia of World Poetry. 24 April 2016. 22 April 2015. Infobase Learning. 978-1-4381-4072-8. 1315.
  3. Book: Haruo Shirane. Envisioning the Tale of Genji: Media, Gender, and Cultural Production. 24 April 2016. 2008. Columbia University Press. 978-0-231-14236-6. 262.
  4. Book: Ying Xiong. Representing Empire: Japanese Colonial Literature in Taiwan and Manchuria. 24 April 2016. 20 June 2014. BRILL. 978-90-04-27411-2. 18.