Utakai Hajime

The Utakai Hajime (歌会始, First poetry reading) is an annual gathering, convened by the Emperor of Japan, in which participants read traditional Japanese poetry on a common theme before a wider audience.[1] It is held on 1 January at the Tokyo Imperial Palace, and is broadcast live on the national television network, NHK.

Utakai Hajime in 1950

History

The exact origins of the tradition are unclear, though it is known that the Emperor Kameyama convened a January poetry reading, at the Imperial Palace in Kyoto, as early as 1267.[1] Sometime during the Edo period the practice became more regular, and since the Meiji restoration of 1869, it has been held almost every year.[1]

Poems written by the general public were admitted for consideration for the first time in 1879.[1] Since 1946, any poet whose work is selected is invited to attend. In 1957 American poet Lucille Nixon became the first non-Japanese person to do so.[2]

Poetry

Poems read at the ceremony belong to the tanka genre.[1]

gollark: One of my friends has a bunch of servers with something like 48GB of memory each which they use *only* for bad PHP applications and Windows VMs or something.
gollark: In-memory caching of beeoids?
gollark: Why did you do that?
gollark: Suffer?
gollark: They were last on about 8 hours ago.

References

  1. "Ceremony of the Utakai Hajime". The Imperial Household Agency. Retrieved 13 November 2012.
  2. An Imperial Poetic Tradition Archived 2011-07-26 at the Wayback Machine, Japan Echo, Diplomatic Agenda, Vol. 26, Nr. 2
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.