4.6 • 18.6K Ratings
🗓️ 27 April 2025
⏱️ 51 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
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0:00.0 | Thank you for listening to The Rest is History. |
0:02.3 | For weekly bonus episodes, |
0:04.0 | add free listening, early access to series, |
0:06.8 | and membership of our much-loved chat community, |
0:09.5 | go to therestishistory.com and join the club. |
0:13.2 | That is, the rest is history.com. In a certain reign, whose can it have been? |
0:29.3 | Someone of no great rank, among all his Majesty's consorts and intimates, enjoyed exceptional |
0:37.2 | favour. Those others who had always assumed that |
0:40.4 | pride of place was properly theirs despised her as a dreadful woman, while the lesser intimates |
0:47.4 | were unhappier still. The way she waited on him day after day only stirred up feeling against her. |
0:55.2 | And perhaps this growing burden of resentment was what affected her health and obliged to often to withdraw in misery to her home. |
1:03.2 | But His Majesty, who could less and less do without her, ignored his critics until his behaviour seemed bound to be the talk of all. |
1:14.9 | So that is the opening paragraph of the supreme, unchallenged, canonical classic of Japanese |
1:22.6 | literature. It's a novel called The Tale of Genji, and to give you a sense of the sheer weight of it, |
1:29.6 | in the translation by Royal Tyler, which we'll be quoting from A Fair Bit today, |
1:34.7 | that book is more than 1,000 pages long. |
1:39.3 | Now, Tom, we're not the rest of literature. |
1:41.2 | So what is a Japanese novel doing on a history podcast? Please explain. Two answers. So as you |
1:47.6 | said, this is the great classic of Japanese literature. I guess the obvious parallel might be with Don Quixote. |
1:54.0 | Yeah. And the role that it plays in Spain. I mean, maybe even with the plays of Shakespeare in England. |
1:59.5 | And I will quote the novelist who in 1968 won Japan's first Nobel Prize for Literature, |
2:06.4 | Yasunari Kawabata, in his acceptance speech. |
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