
Portrait of Ueda Akinari by Koga
Bunrei
Ueda Akinari or Ueda
Shūsei (上田 秋成, July 25, 1734, Osaka - August 8, 1809, Kyoto) was a Japanese
author, scholar and waka poet, and perhaps the most prominent
literary figure in eighteenth century Japan. He was an early
writer in the
yomihon genre and his
two masterpieces,
Tales of Moonlight and Rain (
Ugetsu
monogatari) and
Tales of Spring Rain (
Harusame
monogatari), are central to the canon of
Japanese literature.
Biography
Born to an
Osaka prostitute and an unknown father, Ueda was
adopted in his fourth year by a wealthy merchant who reared him in
comfort and provided him with a good education. As a child he
became gravely ill with
smallpox, and
although he survived, he was left with deformed fingers on both
hands. During his illness, his parents prayed to the god of the
Kashima Inari Shrine, and Ueda felt that this deity had intervened
and saved his life. Throughout his life he remained a strong
believer in the supernatural, and this belief seems to inform
important elements of his literature and scholarship such as his
most famous work, a collection of ghost stories titled
Tales of
Moonlight and Rain.
He inherited the Ueda family oil and paper business when his
adopted father died. However, he was not a successful merchant, and
he lost the business to a fire after running it unhappily for ten
years. During this time, he published several humorous stories in
the
ukiyo-zōshi style
(literally translated as “tales of the floating world”, the name of
a style of books of popular fiction published between the 1680s and
1770s).
Taking the fire as opportunity to leave the business world, Ueda
began studying medicine under Tsuga Teishō, who in addition to
teaching Ueda to be a doctor also taught him about colloquial
Chinese fiction. In 1776 he began to practice medicine and also
published
Tales of Moonlight and Rain. This work places
Ueda Akinari alongside
Takizawa Bakin
among the most prominent writers of
yomihon — a new genre
that represented a dramatic change in reading practices from the
popular fiction that came before it.
In addition to his fiction, Ueda was involved in the field of
research known as
kokugaku
(National Learning), the study of philology and classical Japanese
literature.
Kokugaku was often typified by a rejection of
foreign influences on Japanese culture, notably Chinese language,
Buddhism, and Confucianism. Ueda took a highly independent position
within these circles, and his vigorous polemical dispute with the
leading scholar of the movement,
Motoori Norinaga, is recorded in the
latter's dialogue
Kagaika (呵刈葭 1787-1788).
Some argue that Ueda also worked out this conflict in stories such
as Tales of Moonlight and Rain by beginning his stories grounded on
Chinese stories and moral and intellectual discourses and that he
then foregrounded a Japanese sensibility by calling on supernatural
elements and having his characters feel deep emotion (as opposed to
Chinese reliance on the intellect).
However it is also true that he had a
strong rational, empirical temper, dismissed as nonsensical the
myth-reviving fantasies of kokugaku
scholars, and throughout showed an intense curiosity, distinctive
for its lack of patriotic superiority, in foreign cultures, both
within Japan (the Ainu and Okinawan cultures) and abroad (China
, and Western
countries).
In the years after his wife’s death in 1798 he suffered from
temporary blindness, and although eventually sight returned to his
left eye from that point on he had to dictate much of his writing.
It was at this time that he began working on his second
yomihon, and he finished the first two stories of what
would be
Tales of the Spring Rain (
Harusame
monogatari) in around 1802. The complete version was not
published until 1951, when missing sections of the manuscript were
discovered.
Spring Rain is quite different from
Tales
of Moonlight and Rain, and there is some discussion among
scholars as to which is the superior work. Among other differences,
Spring Rain does not invoke the supernatural, and the
stories are of greatly varied length. The story titled “Hankai” is
about a disreputable ruffian who suddenly converts to Buddhism and
spends the rest of his life as a pious monk. The story anchors the
collection by virtue of its length and the literary skill it
exhibits.
In 1809, Ueda died at the age of 76 in
Kyoto.
Ueda Akinari timeline
- 1755 Published first haikai at the age of 21.
- 1760 Married Ueyama Tama
- 1761 Adopted father died.
- 1766 Published Worldly Monkeys with Ears for the Arts
(Shodō kikimimi sekenzaru).
- 1767 Published Characters of Worldly Mistresses
(Seken Tekake Katagi)
- 1771 The family oil and paper business was destroyed in a
fire.
- 1776 Published Ugetsu Monogatari. Began to practice
medicine.
- 1788 Retired from medicine and devoted himself full time to
writing and scholarship.
- 1797 Wife died. He suffered from temporary blindness.
- 1802 Oldest extant versions of “The Bloodstained Robe” and “The
Celestial Maidens”, the first two stories of Harusame
monogatari (Tales of the Spring Rain).
- 1808 Published Tandai shōshin roku (Notes Bold Yet
Pithy).
Works
See also
References
- Hamada, Kengi. “About the Author.” In Tales of Moonlight
and Rain. New York: Columbia University Press.
- Keene, Donald. 1976. World within Walls: Japanese
Literature of the Pre-Modern Era, 1600-1867. Holt, Rinehart,
and Winston.
- Reider, Noriko T. 2002. Tales of the Supernatural in Early
Modern Japan: Kaidan, Akinari, Ugetsu Monogatari. Edwin Mellen Press.
- Shirane, Haruo, ed. “Early Yomihon: History, Romance, and the
Supernatural.” In Early Modern Japanese Literature. New
York: Columbia University
Press, 2002.
- Takata Mamoru. “Ugetsu Monogatari: A Critical Interpretation.”
In Tales of Moonlight and Rain. New York: Columbia
University Press, 1972.
- Ueda Akinari. 1974. Ugetsu Monogatari: Tales of Moonlight and
Rain Trans. by Leon M. Zolbrod. George Allen and Unwin Ltd.
- Ueda Akinari. 1975. Tales of the Spring Rain. Trans.
by Barry Jackman. The Japan Foundation.
- Washburn, Dennis. “Ghostwriters and Literary Haunts:
Subordinating Art to Ethics in Ugetsu Monogatari.” Monumenta
Nipponica 45.1 (1996)
39-74.
- Zolbrod, Leon M., trans. and ed. Introduction. Ugetsu
Monogatari: Tales of Moonlight and Rain. London: George Allen
& Unwin, 1974.