| Chikamatsu Shigenori was a retainer of the [[Owari Tokugawa clan]], and an amateur [[tea ceremony|tea]] enthusiast, known for his writings on the subject. | | Chikamatsu Shigenori was a retainer of the [[Owari Tokugawa clan]], and an amateur [[tea ceremony|tea]] enthusiast, known for his writings on the subject. |
− | Shigenori's [[1739]] manuscript "Legends of the Tea Ceremony" consists of seven volumes, containing over three hundred tea-related anecdotes, some of which he experienced himself, and some of which he merely heard secondhand. The text circulated in manuscript form for many decades, before being printed (published) in [[1804]], after Shigenori's death, under the title "Stories from a Tearoom Window." The volume was then republished in [[1816]], in response to popular demand. | + | Shigenori's [[1739]] manuscript "Legends of the Tea Ceremony" consists of seven volumes, containing over three hundred tea-related anecdotes, some of which he experienced himself, and some of which he merely heard secondhand. The text circulated in manuscript form for many decades, before being printed (published) in [[1804]], after Shigenori's death, under the title "Stories from a Tearoom Window." The volume was then republished in [[1816]], in response to popular demand. The text speaks of the values of tea as articulated by [[Sen no Rikyu|Sen no Rikyû]], with emphasis on modesty and respect, and appreciation of simplicity, critiquing what Shigenori perceived as an excessive focus on rigid technique, and extravagant over-valuing of tea implements. |
− | *Constantine Vaporis, "The Tea Ceremony: Chikamatsu Shigenori's ''Stories from a Tearoom Window''," in Vaporis (ed.), ''Voices of Early Modern Japan'', Westview Press (2012), 179. | + | *Constantine Vaporis, "The Tea Ceremony: Chikamatsu Shigenori's ''Stories from a Tearoom Window''," in Vaporis (ed.), ''Voices of Early Modern Japan'', Westview Press (2012), 179-181. |