Inoue-Smith Publishes Book of Tanka Poetry
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Dr. Yukiko Inoue-Smith |
Dr. Yukiko Inoue-Smith, a professor of educational psychology and research at the 91快播 School of Education announces the release of her new poetry book, The Inescapable Seasons of Life 鈥 Expressing the Modern Soul in an Ancient Poetic Style.
The book, written in a classic Japanese poetry form called tanka, is published by JustFiction Edition.
About the Author
Yukiko Inoue-Smith, PhD, a professor of educational psychology at the University of
Guam, has been extensively involved in work with tanka. Many of her tanka poems have
received awards. Yukiko has been contributing her tanka poems to a local newspaper
since 2011. Her tanka books recently published include The Shape of Love and Do Cats
Dream?
About the Book
Compared to haiku, Japan鈥檚 oldest poetry genre called 鈥渢anka鈥 (or 鈥渨aka鈥 traditionally)
is not so familiar with people in the United States or rest of the world. In recent
decades, however, tanka is becoming increasingly popular among Western readers, presumably
because they recognize that this poetic style provides an ideal format and length
for expressing their emotions.
Tanka poems written in Japanese are tiny verses of thirty-one syllables in one straight line. But, in English and other languages, it is often written using five lines. For an English language tanka, requirements are not so strict. The challenge is how to use a few words effectively: exactness and concrete image are essential elements of composing tanka. More than in haiku, tanka requires a sense of verbal rhythm and musical flow which encounters in English poems. Finally, tanka conveys its meaning or a feeling by implication, in symbols, or by allusion. This is 鈥測ojo鈥濃 the soul of tanka.
By Yukiko Inoue-Smith (April 2018, JustFiction Edition)
鈥淓scape. This is one of the themes that appears most frequently in my tanka poems鈥he seasons of the human world imprison us. We are held by an invisible chain鈥攖hus we suffer and struggle 鈥. Each of us experiences a sort of desperation in daily living鈥︹ (Excerpt from the Preface)
the morning
rainbow blurred and
then vanished
the moment I looked back鈥
my past can never be erased