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Book of woodblock prints by Kitagawa Utamaro
Utamakura (歌まくら, "poem[s] of the pillow") is the title of a 12-print illustrated book of sexually explicit shunga pictures, published in 1788. The print
Utamakura_(Utamaro)
Rhetorical concept in Japanese poetry
Utamakura (歌枕, "poem pillow") is a rhetorical concept in Japanese poetry. Utamakura is a category of poetic words, often involving place names, that allow
Utamakura
Japanese mythical creature
looks on from above. —Unsigned shunga erotic art "Abalone divers (awabi-tori)" (1788) of the Utamakura series, attrib. to Utamaro, pub. Tsutaya Jūzaburō
Kappa_(folklore)
Japanese prints
sea snails. Amongst the prints are the first print in the erotic book Utamakura (1788); two triptychs called Awabi-tori (鮑取り, "Abalone divers"), one from
Utamaro's pictures of abalone divers
Utamaro's_pictures_of_abalone_divers
Japanese erotic art
courtesan) or allusions in the work itself (such as Utamaro's empon entitled Utamakura). Edo period shunga sought to express a varied world of contemporary sexual
Shunga
Epithets are used in association with certain words in Japanese waka poetry
original meaning but are still used. They are not to be confused with utamakura ("poem pillow"), which are a category of poetic words used to add greater
Makurakotoba
Rhetorical device in Japanese poetry
poem utilizes a multi-layered play on the literary term utamakura ("poem-pillow"). An utamakura is a place-name that is described with set words and associated
Kakekotoba
Group of islands in Miyagi Prefecture, Japan
Ojima whose name is Utamakura. The red "Togetsukyō Bridge", about twenty meters in length, was wholly lost in the Sendai earthquake.
Matsushima
Frontier fortification in Fukushima, Japan
the Kamakura period. However, memory of the barrier was preserved as an utamakura in Japanese poetry, metaphorically evoking images of distance, transition
Shirakawa_Barrier
2nd episode of the 5th season of Star Trek: The Next Generation
18, 2013, followed by the United Kingdom the next day. Ascian language Utamakura – Rhetorical concept in Japanese poetry Hoffman, Jordan (November 20,
Darmok
Ward of Kobe in Kinki, Japan
Genji Monogatari, and Heike Monogatari. Suma is often referred to as an utamakura or meisho, and is mentioned frequently in waka, and in Noh, Kabuki and
Suma-ku,_Kobe
allusive or intertextual language in premodern literature, particularly utamakura in waka. He was Master of Saybrook College and is now a fellow of the
Edward_Kamens
Japanese artist (1753–1806)
in 1961. A partial list of his print series and their dates includes: Utamakura (1788) attributed Chosen Poems (1791–1792) Ten Types of Women's Physiognomies
Utamaro
River in Japan
safflowers and rice to the Kansai region. The Mogami River appears as an utamakura in Japanese poetry, with the influential 17th-century poet Matsuo Bashō
Mogami_River
Mountain in Kyoto prefecture
to bid farewell to the capital; therefore, it was known as a place of utamakura. Due to its strategic location from a transportation and military perspective
Ōeyama_(mountain)
Classical Japanese anthology
would be pronounced matanan. Kamens, Edward; Kamens, Howard I. (1997). Utamakura, Allusion, and Intertextuality in Traditional Japanese Poetry (illustrated ed
Ogura_Hyakunin_Isshu
divided into parts: Summary of Divine Names of Engishiki, Memorandum of Utamakura, Diary of Genroku 2nd year, Diary of Genroku 4th year, Memorandum of Haiku
Sora's_Diary
Japanese traditional folk song
constituted by one chorus of 7, 7, 7, 5. Each song can be divided in 6 parts.: Utamakura (まくら唄), an often repeated descriptive epithet Honuta (本唄), the main body
Jinku
Japanese literary award
1971 No award 1972 Tatsuo Nagai Cochabamba-yuki 1973 Tsuneko Nakazato Utamakura Shōtarō Yasuoka Hashire tomahōku 1974 Yoshie Wada Tsugiki no dai 1975
Yomiuri_Prize
specifically associated with the zig-zag shape. The Eight Bridges is an utamakura (poem-pillow), or famous place that is repeatedly referred to in literature
Eight_Bridges
Three historic mountains in Kashihara, Japan
Scenic Beauty, Special Historic Sites and Special Natural Monuments Meisho Utamakura Kunimi (practice) "大和三山" [Yamato Sanzan] (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural
Yamato_Sanzan
Japanese poetic diary by Ki no Tsurayuki
poems (kiryoka) (such as those compiled in the Man'yōshū) as well as the utamakura and utanikki. These texts constitute the Japanese travel journal, which—as
Tosa_Nikki
Locations alluded to in Japanese poetry
denote a wider range of places of interest. Used in conjunction with utamakura, meisho add layers of allusion to poetry and literary and dramatic works
Meisho
Scenic spot in Nagano, Japan
scenery while traveling the Nakasendō that employed "nezame" as keyword (utamakura). The Rinsen-ji [ja] in Agematsu stands on a cliff overlooking the strange
Nezame_no_toko
Musical artist
Ninkyō Kayō o Utau 1974 Toki wa Nagareru 1978 Matatabi 1981 Tsurezure Utamakura 1984 Ya! Cheetah 1988 Cheetah no Kamona My House 1994 Kiyoko Suizenji
Kiyoko_Suizenji
Japanese writer, courtier and waka poet (825–880)
and crossing the Sumida River, composing poems at famous places (see utamakura) along the way. The Tales of Ise implies this journey was the result of
Ariwara_no_Narihira
Japanese novelist (1909–1987)
were drawn from her own daughter's marriage to an American. Her novel Utamakura ("Song Pillow", 1973) was awarded the Yomiuri Prize. In 1974, she received
Tsuneko_Nakazato
Japanese poet
no Norikane [ja] (1107–1165). Nōin is the author of Gengenshu and Nōin Utamakura. One of his poems is anthologized in the Ogura Hyakunin Isshu: 嵐吹く三室の山のもみぢ葉は
Nōin
Ibaraki Uta-garuta Hikaru Utada Utagawa Hiroshige Utagawa school Utamakura Utamakura (Utamaro) Utamaro Utano, Nara Utashinai, Hokkaidō Utazu UTF-2000
Index of Japan-related articles (U–V)
Index_of_Japan-related_articles_(U–V)
Ruined castle in Miyagi, Japan
to tears. In his account the monument functions as a poetic place or utamakura. The monument also drew the attention of Tokugawa Mitsukuni. Although
Taga_Castle
Japanese poet (1381–1459)
very few journeys far away from Kyoto in his life – to visit various "utamakura" (places famously commemorated in poetry); upon his return to Kyoto, he
Shōtetsu
Tourist activities involving settings of fictional works
be traced back with some stretching of the analogy to the existence of utamakura in waka poetry. Even after the middle ages, stories and travel continued
Contents_tourism
Overview of Japanese literature of the Heian period
Enoshima engi 1050 - Sakuteiki (the first garden manual) 1050 - Nōin Utamakura by Nōin 1055 - tsutsumi chunagon monogatari a book of short stories 1059
Heian_literature
River in Miyagi Prefecture, Japan
Retrieved September 23, 2012. Edward Kamens; Howard I. Kamens (1997). Utamakura, Allusion, and Intertextuality in Traditional Japanese Poetry. Yale University
Natori_River
often incorporating references to classical poetry and famous places (utamakura). In kabuki, michiyuki evolved into a specialized type of love-suicide
Glossary_of_Japanese_theater
UTAMAKURA
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Boy/Male
Argentina, Hindu, Indian, Italian
Cowherd
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Sutcliffe.
Boy/Male
Indian
Perfect; Earth; Power
Girl/Female
Indian
Well spoken.
Surname or Lastname
Reduced form of Irish McCann.English
Reduced form of Irish McCann.English : habitational name from Cann, a place in Dorset, named from Old English canna ‘can’, used in the transferred sense of a deep valley, or a topographic name from the same word used elsewhere in southwestern England.Americanized spelling of Kann or Kahn.
Girl/Female
Muslim
Kind, Faithful and devoted
Boy/Male
Welsh
Legendary son of Aedd.
Girl/Female
Australian, French, Greek
Sea; Ocean
Girl/Female
English
Abbreviation of Tatiana.
Boy/Male
Indian, Kannada
Infinity in Success
UTAMAKURA
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UTAMAKURA