Shūōshi Mizuhara Explained

Qid:Q1940999
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Dateformat:mdy
Death Date:1981
Native Name:水原秋桜子

Shūōshi Mizuhara (水原秋桜子; October 9, 1892 – 1981)[1] was a Japanese haiku poet and physician.

Shūōshi Mizuhara was born on October 9, 1892, in Tokyo.[2] [3] [4] Shūōshi's father was a doctor and raised Shūōshi to follow in his footsteps, eventually taking over his medical practice. Shūōshi graduated with an MD from Tokyo University in 1926, specializing in obstetrics and gynaecology. He became a professor at Showa Medical College in 1928 and was appointed medical advisor for the Ministry of the Imperial Household in 1932. Following World War II, Shūōshi gave up his medical practice to focus on poetry.

Shūōshi's father unsuccessfully attempted to discourage his son's interest in literature. Shūōshi first became interested in tanka and only later turned to haiku. He was initially attached to Shibukaki school of haiku led by Tōyōjō Matsune, but, profoundly influenced by Kyoshi Takahama's manifesto Susumubeki haiku no michi ("The Path on Which Haiku Must Advance"), he soon joined the Hototogisu school and was prominently featured in the magazine.

He increasingly grew dissatisfied with what he saw as the restrictive conservative principles of the Hototogisu group. He published his first haiku collection, Katsushika, in 1930 to a tepid response from Kyoshi. The volume is now recognized by critics as a key work in the modernization of haiku. The next year, he wrote a romantic manifesto that served as his exit from Hototogisu, "Truth in Nature and Truth in Literature", where he wrote: He and his followers had their own publication, Ashibi ("Staggerbush"), a rebranding of a magazine called Hamayumi.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Japan Encyclopedia. 653. Belknap Press. 2002. 9780674017535.
  2. Book: Modern Japanese haiku: an anthology. Ueda, Makoto. 1976. 0-8020-2147-6. Toronto. 1527344.
  3. Book: Biographical dictionary of Japanese literature. 1976. Kodansha International in collaboration with the International Society for Educational Information. Hisamatsu, Sen'ichi. 0-87011-253-8. 1st . Tokyo. 2797379.
  4. Book: Keene, Donald. Dawn to the West : Japanese literature of the modern era. 15 September 1987. 0-8050-0607-9. First Owl Book . New York. 16085183. Donald Keene.