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Thread: japanese cultured novels

  1. #1

    japanese cultured novels

    Wondering if anyone knows of a good novel that reflects japanese culture?
    To make your Kendo effective, you must first make it beautiful...

  2. #2
    KW Team hamish's Avatar
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    Umm, anything written by a Japanese novelist? What do you mean by Japanese culture?

  3. #3
    Quote Originally Posted by Hamish
    Umm, anything written by a Japanese novelist? What do you mean by Japanese culture?
    umm, i guess like a good story set in feudal japan, and reflecting culture in the way like with samurai, and bushido or something...the lifestyle of the times?
    To make your Kendo effective, you must first make it beautiful...

  4. #4
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    Were you thinking about "Tales of the Otori" series?

    The first book was descibed as "fluffy" by someone and I would have to agree. But if you just want something easy to read relating to budo, then give it a go.

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    Cool hmmmmm....novels.........

    Quote Originally Posted by Fenix
    umm, i guess like a good story set in feudal japan, and reflecting culture in the way like with samurai, and bushido or something...the lifestyle of the times?
    hmmmmm....novels how about these titles:

    1.) Musashi: An Epic Novel of the Samurai Era
    by Eiji Yoshikawa (Author), Charles S. Terry, Edwin O. Reischauer

    2.) Taiko: An Epic Novel of War and Glory in Feudal Japan
    by Eiji Yoshikawa, William Scott Wilson

    3.) Cloud of Sparrows
    by TAKASHI MATSUOKA
    (but this book is cross-cultural fiction)

  6. #6
    Quote Originally Posted by Odachi
    Were you thinking about "Tales of the Otori" series?

    The first book was descibed as "fluffy" by someone and I would have to agree. But if you just want something easy to read relating to budo, then give it a go.
    something similar to tales of otori...
    To make your Kendo effective, you must first make it beautiful...

  7. #7
    Magnus Stern
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    "Snow Country" and "Thousand Cranes" by Kawabata Yasunari


    I would really recommend "Snow Country" and "Thousand Cranes" by Nobel Prize winner Kawabata Yasunari. I read them a rather long time ago but they have "followed" me ever since. I'll just have to reread them soon.
    Has absolutely nothing to do with Kendo or Budo.. ..but do I think they can learn us westeners something. Please notice when they are written (1949 and '52) and try to imagine world-politics at that time. It would be very interesting to here from a Japanese reader what you think of these works.



    copied from amazon.com [about "Thousand Cranes]:
    Novel by Kawabata Yasunari, published serially in several newspapers beginning in 1949 and published as Sembazuru with the novel Yama no Oto (The Sound of the Mountain) in 1952. One of Kawabata's finest works, Thousand Cranes was written in part as a sequel to Yukiguni (1948; Snow Country). This melancholy tale uses the classical tea ceremony as a background for the story of a young man's relationships to two women, his father's former mistress and her daughter.

  8. #8
    I second the vote on "Taiko"
    Couldn't agree more !!

    cheers michael
    FU RIN KA ZAN

  9. #9
    theres no musashi or taiko in any chapters/indigo near me...
    To make your Kendo effective, you must first make it beautiful...

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    Cool

    oh yeah by the way all 3 books I've mentioned are available in www.amazon.com

  11. #11
    Quote Originally Posted by Nazo
    hmmmmm....novels how about these titles:

    1.) Musashi: An Epic Novel of the Samurai Era
    by Eiji Yoshikawa (Author), Charles S. Terry, Edwin O. Reischauer

    2.) Taiko: An Epic Novel of War and Glory in Feudal Japan
    by Eiji Yoshikawa, William Scott Wilson

    3.) Cloud of Sparrows
    by TAKASHI MATSUOKA
    (but this book is cross-cultural fiction)
    what did u think of cloud of sparrows? theres also a sequel called autumn bridge
    To make your Kendo effective, you must first make it beautiful...

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    Cool

    Quote Originally Posted by Fenix
    what did u think of cloud of sparrows? theres also a sequel called autumn bridge
    Cloud of Sparrows .... its ok(the thing is its a cross-cultural fiction),
    But I prefer Musashi and Taiko.

    Maybe you would also be interested in reading novels written by a japanese
    post-war author..... Yukio Mishima.


    I Like his novel "Run Away Horses".

  13. #13
    Back To Kihon kanyil's Avatar
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    or for a story about a westerner in feudal Japan, you can try James Clavell's "Shogun". He's an excellent writer and specializes in fictions set in an Asian context.

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