학술논문

Renga : A European Poem and its Japanese Model
Document Type
research-article
Author
Source
Comparative Literature Studies, 2017 May . 54(2), 275-304.
Subject
Renga
Paz
Sanguineti
Tomlinson
Roubaud
Shinkei
Medieval poetry
Poetry
Modernist poetry
Religious poetry
Surrealist poetry
Buddhism
Sonnets
Japanese culture
Stanzas
Literary criticism
Language
English
ISSN
00104132
15284212
Abstract
Renga (1971) is a book-length chain of linked poems written in four European languages by four leading twentieth-century poets: Octavio Paz, Edoardo Sanguineti, Charles Tomlinson, and Jacques Roubaud. Because this pioneering multiauthored, multilingual, and multicultural work is based on the medieval Japanese poetic genre of “linked verse” ( renga ), the question arises: what is the exact nature of the relation between the modern Western poem and its Japanese model? This article argues that, far from being a merely superficial imitation of certain formal elements of the Japanese poetic practice of group composition, Renga is remarkably faithful to the spirit of the original genre, especially its underlying Zen aesthetics, philosophy, and psychology of muga (no-self). At the same time, the poem's embodiment of a “negative poetic self” does not alienate it from its own Western tradition. On the contrary, in this respect it also faithfully reflects both the Zeitgeist of the postwar period when it was written and, more generally, the post-Romantic, modernist concept of the poetic self. Much of the credit for this remarkable achievement and for the continuing seminal influence of this unique work is due to the profound cross-cultural insight of the project's leading poet, Paz.