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Songs in the Garden - Poetry and Gardens in Ancient Japan (Paperback)
Loot Price: R518
Discovery Miles 5 180
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Songs in the Garden - Poetry and Gardens in Ancient Japan (Paperback)
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Loot Price R518
Discovery Miles 5 180
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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The garden as a poem. Not simply a beautiful design to be
appreciated by looking, but a living poem that can actually be
read. That is the way gardens were thought of in Japan during the
Heian period (794-1185). In that ancient society, a detailed
understanding of poetry was an essential part of life for people in
the literate classes. Poetic anthologies were learned by heart and
all manner of communications either included poems or were
interwoven with references to poetry. A central aspect of
Heian-period poetry was that it employed images of nature as
symbols of human emotions. A lonely pine tree on a windswept, rocky
seashore evoked the bitter sadness of someone waiting for their
lover. A scene of cut reeds, fallen and scattered this way and
that, was a standard epithet to express unsettled, scattered
emotions. When gardens were built, many of those same elements of
nature - pines and reeds and so many more - were also incorporated
into the designs. When gardens were viewed, they were understood
not simply as objects of visual beauty, but as being filled with
allegorical meanings drawn from poetry. These visual cues triggered
in the minds of people in the garden the memory of poems they knew,
and acted as catalysts in the creation of new ones. The word for
poem, "uta," was the same as that for song, and poems at that time
were often sung or chanted, rather than spoken. In this way, the
poetic elements were like songs in the garden. The author, Marc
Peter Keane, is well-known both as a garden designer and writer.
Having lived 18 years in Kyoto, Japan, he brings ample first hand
knowledge to the subject. "Songs in the Garden" not only describes
the nature of gardens in Japan 1000 years ago, but also suggests a
new paradigm for understanding what gardens can mean to us today.
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