Available Formats
Travel Writings
By (Author) Matsuo Basho
Translated by Steven D. Carter
Hackett Publishing Co, Inc
Hackett Publishing Co, Inc
27th October 2020
United States
General
Non Fiction
Asian history
Travel and holiday
Hardback
304
Width 152mm, Height 228mm
552g
'The literary significance of these six texts is enormous, and a single, affordable volume containing all of them, in clear and accessible translations, with thorough annotations, [will] be a great boon to teachers of Japanese literature.The strengths of this translation are clear...The annotations are extremely valuable: they show a solid grasp of Bash's life, work, and times, and provide rich and detailed background, with plentiful information about allusions to Chinese and Japanese texts andconnections with other works by Bash. I don't think I have encountered an English translation of Bash, or indeed of any Japanese poet, with such comprehensive annotation. . . . The thoroughness with which [these translations are] annotated will make this book a significant scholarly resource; it will also help general readers appreciate the density and delicacy of Bash's writing.In short, I think this translation of Bash's travel diaries will be an important and welcome addition to the English-language literature on one of the most important poets of the Japanese tradition.' -David Lurie, Columbia University
"Destined to delight readers with its vibrant, spot-on translations, this definitive collection of haiku grandmaster Bashs travel writings, in prose as well as poetry, conveys the exquisite pleasures and heartbreaks of the road as a metaphor for life itself."
Adam L. Kern,University of WisconsinMadison
"Steven Carter is an outstanding scholar and translator, and his work here is superb. The six poetic travel diaries that he includes range from Bashs most beloved works to several lesser-known gems. With its copious and insightful annotations, introductions, maps, and appendices, all of which are informed by the best and latest Japanese scholarship,Travel Writingswill long be the go-to source in English for Bashs lyrical travel ruminations. The work is sure to appeal to poets, students, and scholars alike, many of whom may be inspired to set out, with book in hand, to retrace the steps of the great seventeenth-century haikai master through the hinterlands of Japan."
R. Keller Kimbrough,University of Colorado Boulder
Steven D. Carteris Yamato Ichihashi Chair in Japanese History and Civilization, emeritus, Stanford University. His most recent books are How to Read a Japanese Poem (Columbia University Press, 2019) and The Columbia Anthology of Japanese Essays (Columbia University Press, 2014).