Soga Monogatari

Revision as of 23:16, 8 December 2011 by LordAmeth (talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
  • Japanese: 曽我物語 (Soga monogatari)

Soga Monogatari, or "The Tale of the Soga Brothers," is the story of the Soga brothers, Soga Gorô and Soga Jûrô, who seek their father's murderer in order to kill the murderer and avenge their father. The story has been told and retold with much variation and elaboration, in a variety of forms, including medieval storytelling performance, kôwaka mai, illustrated books, Noh, kabuki, and bunraku puppet theatre, but is based originally on a true historical incident, in which two brothers by the name of Soga, on 1193/5/28, killed Kudô Suketsune, their father's killer.

The Soga Brothers story was first related in the Azuma kagami, first compiled after 1266; texts known by the name "Soga Monogatari" came sometime afterwards, along with kôwaka mai (medieval ballad-dramas), and later Noh plays, and, in the 17th century, kabuki plays.

Soga Gorô came to be a role strongly associated with the Ichikawa Danjûrô line, and most especially with , seen here in a woodblock print by Torii Kiyomasu in that role.

The Soga story came to be incorporated into a number of kabuki plays with their own separate and distinct characters and plots, but in which characters are then revealed to be Soga Gorô and Jûrô, hunting for their father's killer. One of the most famous and most popular of these plays, known as Soga-mono, is Sukeroku. Despite being set in contemporary 18th century Edo, and more specifically in the Yoshiwara pleasure district, where ruffian Sukeroku seeks the love of the courtesan Agemaki, and seeks his father's killer, Sukeroku is later revealed to have been Soga Gorô all along.

References

  • Mills, D.E. "Kataki-uchi: The Practice of Blood Revenge in Pre-Modern Japan." Modern Asian Studies 10:4 (1976). pp530-531.