BOOKS

Words to Live by

Words to Live by

Japanese Classics for Our Time

Nakano Kōji
Translated by Juliet Winters Carpenter

Japan Library series
Japan Publishing Industry Foundation for Culture

Philosophy & Religion

¥2,700 + tax

ISBN 9784866580241
210 mm x 148 mm / 236 pp. / March 2018

ISBN 9784866580463 (ePub)
ISBN 9784866580364 (PDF)

Nakano Kōji opens the door to the treasury of Japanese classics by introducing six writers who are his personal favorites. The writers under his lens span seven centuries, ranging from the twelfth century to the nineteenth. Three are poets; three wrote timeless prose. The hermit-monk Ryōkan, a poet who loved nothing more than bouncing balls with neighborhood children or just sitting sprawled in his hut listening to the sound of rain, teaches the value of living with a spirit of play. Kenkō offers trenchant comments on the aesthetics of life, grounded in an appreciation of the immediacy of death. Kamo no Chōmei, a journalist par excellence, found happiness late in life by flouting convention and “rejoicing in the absence of grief.” Dōgen, the founder of Sōtō Zen in Japan, takes us on a mind-bending trip to the Dharma—ultimate truth—that involves revolutionary ways of conceiving of time, life, and death. Saigyō, the beloved itinerant monk-poet, continually explores his own wayward heart and its vast, incorrigible love of beauty. Buson the haiku poet uses his painter’s eye to capture cosmic vistas as well as moments of poignancy in poems of seventeen syllables.

NAKANO Kōji
Born in Ichikawa, Chiba Prefecture, he studied on his own and entered the prestigious Fifth High School in Kumamoto. After a stint in the armed forces during the Pacific War, he graduated from the German Literature Department of the University of Tokyo. Starting in 1952, he taught for twenty-eight years at Kokugakuin University while translating the works of modern writers such as Franz Kafka, Erich Nossack, and Günter Grass. In 1966, he went to Europe for a year as a research scholar. On his return, he immersed himself in Japanese medieval literature and began writing literary criticism, novels, and essays. His first book, a study of Shogun Minamoto no Sanetomo, came out in 1972. His book Bruegel e no tabi (Journey to Bruegel), inspired by his encounters overseas with Western paintings, validates the first half of his life while creating a distinctive worldview. He wrote various award-winning books including the autobiographical novel Mugi ururu hi ni (When the Wheat Ripens); Harasu no ita hibi (Days with Haras), a memoir of his departed dog; and Seihin no shisō (The Concept of Honest Poverty). From 1993 he served as director of the Kanagawa Literature Association. His final book was Seneca: Gendaijin e no tegami (Seneca: Letters to People of Today). Throughout his prolific writing career, Nakano explored the nature of true happiness, offering words of warning and encouragement for modern Japanese.

*information as of time of publication

Japan Library series
Philosophy & Religion

Publisher:
Japan Publishing Industry Foundation for Culture

Hardcover
¥2,700 + tax
ISBN 9784866580241
210 mm x 148 mm / 236 pp. / March 2018

eBook
ISBN 9784866580463 (ePub)
ISBN 9784866580364 (PDF)

Preface // Ryōkan [1758–1831] / 1. A Mysterious Charm / 2. Taking Religious Vows / 3. Who Am I? / 4. Compassionate by Nature / 5. A Man of Inaction // Yoshida Kenkō [c. 1283–c.1353] / 6. The Joy of Living / 7. Tranquil in Body and Mind / 8. If You Are Determined to Achieve One Thing // Kamo no Chōmei [c. 1155–1216] / 9. A Remarkable Master of Prose / 10. Taking Pleasure in the Absence of Grief // Dōgen [1200–1253] / 11. On Being / 12. The Eternal Now / 13. Being Is Time / 14. The World of the Mind / 15. Life and Death // Saigyō [1118–1190] / 16. The Self and the Heart / 17. Rovings / 18. Cherry Blossoms / 19. A Born Poet / 20. Seeing the Afterlife Close at Hand // Yosa Buson [1716–1784] / 21. A Haiku Poet of Grand Vistas / 22. Poems of Deep Feeling // Afterword: The Classics Reborn / A Guide to Titles Cited in the Text / References

「無為」「心身永閑」「存命の喜び」。豊かな心を求めて生きた先達、良寛・兼好・鴨⾧明・道元・西行・蕪村の言葉から「いまを生きる知恵」を学ぶ。古典の言葉がよみがえる、世界に向けた日本の古典案内集成。

中野孝次
1925年1月、千葉県市川市生まれ。独学で熊本の旧制五高に進み、軍隊生活を挟んで、戦後、東京大学文学部独文科を卒業。1952年から28年間、国学院大学で教鞭をとるかたわら、カフカ、ノサック、グラスなど現代ドイツ文学の翻訳紹介に努める。1966年、同学在外研究員として1年間西欧諸国に滞在。帰国後、日本の中世文学に傾倒し、日本文学の批評や小説・エッセイなどの執筆活動も開始。1972年に初の著作『実朝考』を刊行。さらに滞欧時の絵画との出会いをもとに半生を検証した1976年のエッセイ『ブリューゲルへの旅』で独自の世界を確立。その後も自伝的小説『麦熟るる日に』、愛犬の回想記『ハラスのいた日々』、凛然と生きる文人を描いた『清貧の思想』など多彩な執筆活動を続け、数々の文学賞を受賞。1993年からは財団法人神奈川文学振興会理事長を務め、2004年7月、肺炎のため逝去。最期の著書『セネカ 現代人への手紙』まで、人生の真の幸福を追求した数々の著作には、現代日本人への警句と励ましとが満ちている。

*著者略歴は書籍刊行時のものを表示しています。

Original Japanese Edition

いまを生きる知恵(抄訳)

中野孝次 著

岩波書店 刊

2002/01/17

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