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Wednesday, April 22, 2015

A saijiki (歳時記, "year time chronicle") is a list of kigo (seasonal terms) used in haiku and related forms of poetry. An entry in a saijiki usually includes a description of the kigo itself, as well as a list of similar or related words, and some examples of haiku that include that kigo. A kiyose (Japanese: 季寄せ) is similar, but does not contain sample poems. Modern saijiki and kiyose are divided into the four seasons and New Year, with some containing a further section for seasonless (muki 無季) topics. Each seasonal section is further divided into a standard set of categories, each containing a list of relevant kigo. The most common categories are:

  • The Season
  • The Heavens
  • The Earth
  • Humanity
  • Observances
  • Animals
  • Plants

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In the Japanese calendar, seasons traditionally followed the lunisolar calendar with the solstices and equinoxes at the middle of a season. The traditional Japanese seasons are:

Spring: 4 Februaryâ€"5 May
Summer: 6 Mayâ€"7 August
Autumn: 8 Augustâ€"6 November
Winter: 7 Novemberâ€"3 February

In categorising kigo, a saijiki or kiyose divides each season into early, middle, and late periods, as follows:

Early spring: 4 Februaryâ€"5 March
Mid-spring: 6 Marchâ€"4 April
Late spring: 5 Aprilâ€"5 May
Early summer: 6 Mayâ€"5 June
Mid-summer: 6 Juneâ€"6 July
Late summer: 7 Julyâ€"7 August
Early autumn: 8 Augustâ€"7 September
Mid-autumn: 8 Septemberâ€"7 October
Late autumn: 8 Octoberâ€"6 November
Early winter: 7 Novemberâ€"6 December
Mid-winter: 7 Decemberâ€"4 January
Late winter: 5 Januaryâ€"3 February

Examples of saijiki and kiyose



English

  • The Five Hundred Essential Japanese Season Words, selected by Kenkichi Yamamoto, on Renku Home
  • William J. Higginson, ed. Haiku world: an international poetry almanac. Kodansha, 1996. ISBN 978-4-7700-2090-1
  • The Japanese Haiku Topical Dictionary at the University of Virginia Japanese Text Initiative
  • World Kigo Database, worldwide saijiki

Japanese

  • Masaoka Shiki, ed. Kiyose. 1930 (Japanese: 正岡子規 編『季寄せ』(三省堂、1930))
  • Kyoshi Takahama, ed. A New Saijiki, 1934 (Japanese: 高浜虚子 編『新歳時記』(三省堂、1934))
  • Teiko Inahata, ed. The New Hototogisu Saijiki, 1996 (Japanese: 稲ç•'汀子 編『ホトトギス 新歳時記』(三省堂、1996)& CD版(1998))

References



External links



  • Le Saijiki en français by Seegan Mabesoone (French)

See also



  • Haiku in English
  • List of Kigo
  • Renga, an older form of poetry employing kigo
  • Renku, the poetic form from which haiku derived, also using kigo


 
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