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  1. A100 文学部/人文学研究科・文学研究科・国際言語文化研究科
  2. A100b 刊行物
  3. 名古屋大学人文学研究論集
  4. 5

Fūgetsudō Magosuke and the Business of Books in Eighteenth-Century Nagoya

https://doi.org/10.18999/jouhunu.5.291
https://doi.org/10.18999/jouhunu.5.291
bb745f7e-a65f-4500-8aa4-36ace71bb257
名前 / ファイル ライセンス アクション
jouhunu_5_291.pdf jouhunu_5_291.pdf (118 KB)
アイテムタイプ itemtype_ver1(1)
公開日 2022-04-14
タイトル
タイトル Fūgetsudō Magosuke and the Business of Books in Eighteenth-Century Nagoya
言語 en
著者 McGEE, Dylan

× McGEE, Dylan

en McGEE, Dylan

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アクセス権
アクセス権 open access
アクセス権URI http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2
キーワード
主題Scheme Other
主題 haikai
キーワード
主題Scheme Other
主題 haisho
キーワード
主題Scheme Other
主題 Bashō
キーワード
主題Scheme Other
主題 Fūgetsudō
キーワード
主題Scheme Other
主題 Nagoya
キーワード
主題Scheme Other
主題 publishing
内容記述
内容記述タイプ Abstract
内容記述 During the eighteenth century, the Fūgetsudō was one of the most commercially successful booksellers in Nagoya and the Tōkai region at large, in no small part because of its nodal position between important publishing houses in Kyoto and local cultural elites. While its most lucrative trade appears to have been in high-market scholarly works, the firm long prided itself on its inventory of haikai poetry collections, which reputedly drew Matsuo Bashō himself to visit the shop in Jōkyō 4 (1687) and made the Fūgetsudō into a cultural epicenter for local Bashō-school poets for over a century thereafter. This paper examines how the Fūgetsudō’s market position as a purveyor of haisho played a key role in its development from a retailer and financier of jointly published books in its early days to an independent publisher by the early Kansei period (1789–1801). A collection of over ninety letters addressed to a wealthy merchant family of Bashō-school poets in Narumi between Meiwa 8 (1771) and 9 (1772) attests to how actively the Fūgetsudō sought to cultivate a customer base, particularly among the local network of haikai poets. Moreover, close collaboration with its parent firm in Kyoto, along with smaller, dedicated publishers of poetry like Tachibanaya Jihee and Maruya Zenroku, can be seen to have leveraged the Fūgetsudō technologically, towards becoming the premiere venue in Nagoya for publishing poets like Yokoi Yayū (1702–1783) and Katō Kyōtai (1732–1792). Thus we may argue that the history of the Fūgetsudō was in many ways shaped by its longstanding association with Bashō school poets.
言語 en
出版者
出版者 名古屋大学人文学研究科
言語 ja
言語
言語 eng
資源タイプ
資源タイプresource http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_6501
タイプ departmental bulletin paper
出版タイプ
出版タイプ VoR
出版タイプResource http://purl.org/coar/version/c_970fb48d4fbd8a85
ID登録
ID登録 10.18999/jouhunu.5.291
ID登録タイプ JaLC
収録物識別子
収録物識別子タイプ PISSN
収録物識別子 2433-233X
書誌情報 ja : 名古屋大学人文学研究論集
en : The Journal of Humanities, Nagoya University

巻 5, p. 291-297, 発行日 2022-03-31
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