Knowledge

The Lady who Loved Insects

Source 📝

99:
those with eccentric behaviour and unconventional tastes. Robert Backus argues that the modern reader may prefer her independence and naturalness to the "excessive artificiality of the Heian conception of feminine beauty". He also draws parallels with the vernacular
268: 75:
involving furry caterpillars, leading to laughter on the part of others. Portrayed as even more eccentric is her disregard for her physical appearance: she leaves her hair untrimmed; has unplucked eyebrows; neglects to
80:; and allows herself to be seen by men. 'Oh, how regrettable! Why does she have such a weird mind'. When an incipient love affair comes to an end along with the tale it is of little surprise to any of the observers. 329: 206: 369: 374: 359: 310: 281: 247: 349: 59: 384: 156:. Michele Marra also refers to Fujiwara Munesuke, again links the tale with setsuwa that similarly challenge 105: 354: 379: 302: 273: 239: 92: 157: 8: 364: 269:
Seeds in the Heart: Japanese Literature from Earliest Times to the Late Sixteenth Century
42: 306: 277: 243: 194: 299:
The Aesthetics of Discontent: Politics and Reclusion in Medieval Japanese Literature
77: 71:
The protagonist befriends insects, names her attendants after them, and engages in
334: 187: 72: 95:
may be attracted by her independence of mind, the author was probably trying to
343: 165: 108:, the bee-keeping minister, who gave his favourites names such as "Long Legs" 263: 169: 88: 54: 200: 236:
The Riverside Counselor's Stories: Vernacular Fiction of Late Heian Japan
46: 96: 181: 101: 50: 161: 57:
court lady. It is one of ten short stories in the collection
233: 341: 160:orthodoxy, and suggests that the story may see 149: 133: 117: 32: 296: 143: 127: 111: 26: 262: 229: 227: 225: 223: 342: 220: 13: 207:Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind 14: 396: 323: 83: 370:12th-century Japanese literature 104:tradition and anecdotes told of 164:preferred to the values of the 305:. pp. 63–69, esp. p. 69. 290: 256: 168:aristocracy at the end of the 91:has suggested that, while the 1: 330:Text in translation by Backus 213: 16:Twelfth-century Japanese tale 60:Tsutsumi Chūnagon Monogatari 7: 335:Original Text (In Japanese) 175: 150: 134: 118: 33: 10: 401: 375:Heian period in literature 303:University of Hawaii Press 234:Backus, Robert L. (1985). 21:The Lady who Loved Insects 274:Columbia University Press 240:Stanford University Press 144: 128: 112: 27: 360:Entomological literature 66: 297:Marra, Michele (1991). 41:is the twelfth-century 350:Japanese short stories 140:, and "Speckled Wings" 385:Fiction about insects 34:Mushi-mezuru Himegimi 355:Japanese aesthetics 201:Geisha (appearance) 380:Insects in culture 45:of one who defies 195:The Tale of Genji 106:Fujiwara Munesuke 78:blacken her teeth 49:and breaches the 47:social convention 392: 317: 316: 294: 288: 287: 260: 254: 253: 231: 155: 153: 147: 146: 139: 137: 131: 130: 123: 121: 115: 114: 73:poetic exchanges 40: 39: 36: 30: 29: 400: 399: 395: 394: 393: 391: 390: 389: 340: 339: 326: 321: 320: 313: 295: 291: 284: 276:. p. 542. 261: 257: 250: 232: 221: 216: 188:The Pillow Book 178: 141: 125: 124:, "Short Horns" 109: 86: 69: 37: 24: 17: 12: 11: 5: 398: 388: 387: 382: 377: 372: 367: 362: 357: 352: 338: 337: 332: 325: 324:External links 322: 319: 318: 311: 289: 282: 255: 248: 218: 217: 215: 212: 211: 210: 203: 198: 191: 184: 177: 174: 162:Buddhist truth 85: 84:Interpretation 82: 68: 65: 53:expected of a 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 397: 386: 383: 381: 378: 376: 373: 371: 368: 366: 363: 361: 358: 356: 353: 351: 348: 347: 345: 336: 333: 331: 328: 327: 314: 312:0-8248-1364-2 308: 304: 300: 293: 285: 283:0-231-11441-9 279: 275: 271: 270: 265: 264:Keene, Donald 259: 251: 249:0-8047-1260-3 245: 241: 237: 230: 228: 226: 224: 219: 209: 208: 204: 202: 199: 197: 196: 192: 190: 189: 185: 183: 180: 179: 173: 171: 167: 163: 159: 152: 136: 120: 107: 103: 98: 94: 90: 81: 79: 74: 64: 62: 61: 56: 52: 48: 44: 43:Japanese tale 35: 23: 22: 298: 292: 267: 258: 235: 205: 193: 186: 170:Heian period 89:Donald Keene 87: 70: 58: 20: 19: 18: 135:Tsunomijika 365:Monogatari 344:Categories 214:References 151:Hanemadara 266:(1999). 176:See also 166:Fujiwara 119:Ashitaka 97:satirize 182:Setsuwa 102:setsuwa 51:decorum 309:  280:  246:  93:reader 28:虫めづる姫君 158:court 67:Story 55:Heian 307:ISBN 278:ISBN 244:ISBN 346:: 301:. 272:. 242:. 238:. 222:^ 172:. 148:, 145:羽斑 132:, 129:角短 116:, 113:足高 63:. 31:, 315:. 286:. 252:. 154:) 142:( 138:) 126:( 122:) 110:( 38:) 25:(

Index

Japanese tale
social convention
decorum
Heian
Tsutsumi Chūnagon Monogatari
poetic exchanges
blacken her teeth
Donald Keene
reader
satirize
setsuwa
Fujiwara Munesuke
court
Buddhist truth
Fujiwara
Heian period
Setsuwa
The Pillow Book
The Tale of Genji
Geisha (appearance)
Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind




Stanford University Press
ISBN
0-8047-1260-3
Keene, Donald
Seeds in the Heart: Japanese Literature from Earliest Times to the Late Sixteenth Century

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.