Yoshida Kenko

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  • Born: 1283
  • Died: 1350
  • Japanese: 吉田兼好 (Yoshida Kenkou, Yoshida Kaneyoshi)

Yoshida Kenkô was the author of the Tsurezuregusa, a now-famous miscellany.

Kenkô took the tonsure around 1313 and became a tonseisha (someone who took the tonsure, but didn't truly enter the monastic community or lifestyle), something which was becoming increasingly common, or popular, around that time. From roughly 1319 to 1333, he wrote the essays which would come to comprise the Tsurezuregusa.

Though the Tsurezuregusa speaks of a yearning for the past, and a disdain for new up-and-comers (nariagari), Kenkô did not in fact remove himself from city or court life, and to the contrary actively attended social events held by the likes of Ashikaga Takauji, Ashikaga Tadayoshi, Kô no Moronao, and Sasaki Dôyô.

References

  • H. Paul Varley, "Ashikaga Yoshimitsu and the World of Kitayama: Social Change and Shogunal Patronage in Early Muromachi Japan", in John Hall and Toyoda Takeshi eds., Japan in the Muromachi Age, University of California Press (1977), 186.