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Masaoka_Shiki

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  • Masaoka Shiki (正岡 子規, October 14, 1867 – September 19, 1902), pen-name of Masaoka Noboru (正岡 升),&#91;2&#93; was a Japanese poet, author, and literary critic in Meiji period Japan. Shiki is regarded as a major figure in the development of modern haiku poetry,&#91;3&#93; credited with writing nearly 20,000 stanzas during his short life.&#91;4&#93; He also wrote on reform of tanka poetry.&#91;5&#93;
  • Some consider Shiki to be one of the four great haiku masters, the others being Matsuo Bashō, Yosa Buson, and Kobayashi Issa.&#91;6&#93;&#91;7&#93;
  • Shiki, or rather Tsunenori (常規) as he was originally named,&#91;8&#93; was born in Matsuyama City in Iyo Province (present day Ehime Prefecture) to a samurai class family of modest means.&#91;1&#93; As a child, he was called Tokoronosuke (處之助); in adolescence, his name was changed to Noboru (升).&#91;citation needed&#93;
  • His father, Tsunenao (正岡常尚),&#91;9&#93;&#91;10&#93; was an alcoholic who died when Shiki was five years of age.&#91;1&#93; His mother, Yae,&#91;11&#93; was a daughter of Ōhara Kanzan, a Confucian scholar.&#91;1&#93; Kanzan was the first of Shiki's extra-school tutors; at the age of 7 the boy began reading Mencius under his tutelage.&#91;12&#93; Shiki later confessed to being a less-than-diligent student.&#91;12&#93;
  • At age 15 Shiki became something of a political radical, attaching himself to the then-waning Freedom and People's Rights Movement and getting himself banned from public speaking by the principal of Matsuyama Middle School, which he was attending.&#91;13&#93; Around this time he developed an interest in moving to Tokyo and did so in 1883.&#91;14&#93;
  • The young Shiki first attended his hometown Matsuyama Middle School, where Kusama Tokiyoshi, a leader of the discredited Freedom and People's Rights Movement, had recently served as principal.&#91;13&#93; In 1883, a maternal uncle arranged for him to come to Tokyo.&#91;14&#93; Shiki was first enrolled in Kyōritsu Middle School and later matriculated into University Preparatory School.&#91;15&#93; (Daigaku Yobimon) affiliated with Imperial University (Teikoku Daigaku).&#91;16&#93; While studying here, the teenage Shiki enjoyed playing baseball&#91;17&#93; and befriended fellow student Natsume Sōseki, who would go on to become a famous novelist.&#91;18&#93;
  • He entered Tokyo Imperial University in 1890.&#91;19&#93; But by 1892 Shiki, by his own account too engrossed in haiku writing, failed his final examinations, left the Hongō dormitory that had been provided to him by a scholarship, and dropped out of college.&#91;19&#93; Others say tuberculosis, an illness that dogged his later life, was the reason he left school.&#91;20&#93;
  • While Shiki is best known as a haiku poet,&#91;21&#93; he wrote other genres of poetry,&#91;22&#93; prose criticism of poetry,&#91;23&#93; autobiographical prose,&#91;23&#93; and was a short prose essayist.&#91;11&#93; (His earliest surviving work is a school essay, Yōken Setsu ("On Western Dogs"), where he praises the varied utility of western dogs as opposed to Japanese ones, which "only help in hunting and scare away burglars."&#91;24&#93;)
  • Contemporary to Shiki was the idea that traditional Japanese poetic short forms, such as the haiku and tanka, were waning due to their incongruity in the modern Meiji period.&#91;15&#93; Shiki, at times, expressed similar sentiments.&#91;25&#93; There were no great living practitioners although these forms of poetry retained some popularity.&#91;26&#93;
  • Despite an atmosphere of decline, only a year or so after his 1883 arrival in Tokyo, Shiki began writing haiku.&#91;19&#93; In 1892, the same year he dropped out of university, Shiki published a serialized work advocating haiku reform, Dassai Shooku Haiwa or "Talks on Haiku from the Otter's Den".&#91;21&#93; A month after completion of this work, in November 1892, he was offered a position as haiku editor in the paper that had published it, Nippon, and maintained a close relationship with this journal throughout his life.&#91;21&#93; In 1895 another serial was published in the same paper, "A Text on Haikai for Beginners", Haikai Taiyō.&#91;21&#93; These were followed by other serials: Meiji Nijūkunen no Haikukai or "The Haiku World of 1896" where he praised works by disciples&#91;27&#93; Takahama Kyoshi and Kawahigashi Hekigotō,&#91;28&#93; Haijin Buson or "The Haiku Poet Buson" (1896–1897&#91;28&#93;) expressing Shiki's idea of this 18th-century poet whom he identifies with his school of haiku,&#91;5&#93; and Utayomi ni Atauru Sho or "Letters to a Tanka Poet" (1898) where he urged reform of the tanka poetry form.&#91;5&#93;
  • The above work, on tanka, is an example of Shiki's expanded focus during the last few years of his life. He died four years after taking up tanka as a topic.&#91;29&#93; Bedsore and morphine-addled, little more than a year before his death Shiki began writing sickbed diaries.&#91;30&#93; These three are Bokujū Itteki or "A Drop of Ink" (1901), Gyōga Manroku or "Stray Notes While Lying on My Back" (1901–1902), and Byōshō Rokushaku or "A Sixfoot Sickbed" (1902).&#91;5&#93;
  • Shiki suffered from tuberculosis (TB) much of his life. In 1888&#91;31&#93; or 1889&#91;32&#93; he began coughing up blood&#91;15&#93; and soon adopted the pen-name "Shiki" from the Japanese hototogisu—the Japanese name for lesser cuckoos.&#91;32&#93; The Japanese word hototogisu can be written with various combinations of Chinese characters, including 子規, which can alternatively be read as either "hototogisu" or "shiki". It is a Japanese conceit that this bird coughs blood as it sings,&#91;32&#93; which explains why the name "Shiki" was adopted.
  • Suffering from the early symptoms of TB, Shiki sought work as a war correspondent in the First Sino-Japanese War&#91;32&#93; and, while eventually obtaining his goal, he arrived in China after the April 17, 1895 signing of the Treaty of Shimonoseki.&#91;33&#93; Instead of reporting on the war, he spent an unpleasant time harassed by Japanese soldiers&#91;34&#93; in Dalian, Luangtao, and the Lüshunkou District, meeting on May 10, 1895&#91;35&#93; the famous novelist Mori Ōgai, who was at the time an army doctor.&#91;33&#93;
  • Living in filthy conditions in China apparently worsened his TB.&#91;33&#93; Shiki continued to cough blood throughout his return voyage to Japan and was hospitalized in Kobe.&#91;33&#93; After being discharged, he returned to his home town of Matsuyama city and convalesced in the home of the famed novelist Natsume Sōseki.&#91;33&#93; During this time he took on disciples and promulgated a style of haiku that emphasized gaining inspiration from personal experiences of nature.&#91;33&#93; Still in Matsuyama in 1897, a member of this group, Yanigihara Kyokudō, established a haiku magazine, Hototogisu,&#91;5&#93; an allusion to Shiki's pen name.&#91;32&#93; Operation of this magazine was quickly moved to Tokyo. Takahama Kyoshi, another disciple,&#91;27&#93; assumed control and the magazine's scope was extended to include prose work.&#91;11&#93;
  • Shiki came to Tokyo,&#91;36&#93; and his group of disciples there were known as the "Nippon school" after the paper where he had been haiku editor and that now published the group's work.&#91;28&#93;
  • Although bedridden by 1897,&#91;5&#93; Shiki's disease worsened further around 1901.&#91;11&#93; He developed Pott's disease and began using morphine as a painkiller.&#91;11&#93; By 1902 he may have been relying heavily on the drug.&#91;37&#93; During this time Shiki wrote three autobiographical works.&#91;5&#93; He died of tuberculosis in 1902 at age 34.&#91;32&#93;
  • Shiki may be credited with salvaging traditional short-form Japanese poetry and carving out a niche for it in the modern Meiji period.&#91;38&#93; While he advocated reform of haiku, this reform was based on the idea that haiku was a legitimate literary genre.&#91;39&#93; He argued that haiku should be judged by the same yardstick that is used when measuring the value of other forms of literature — something that was contrary to views held by prior poets.&#91;40&#93; Shiki firmly placed haiku in the category of literature, and this was unique.&#91;citation needed&#93;
  • Some modern haiku deviate from the traditional 5–7–5 sound pattern and dispensing with the kigo ("season word"); Shiki's haiku reform advocated neither break with tradition.&#91;6&#93;
  • His particular style rejected "the puns or fantasies often relied on by the old school" in favor of "realistic observation of nature".&#91;41&#93; Shiki, like other Meiji period writers,&#91;citation needed&#93; borrowed a dedication to realism from Western literature. This is evident in his approach to both haiku&#91;39&#93; and tanka.&#91;42&#93;
  • Shiki played baseball as a teenager and was inducted into the Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame in 2002.&#91;17&#93; A group of 1898 tanka by him mention the sport.&#91;43&#93;