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Renga
Haiku Attunement & the “Aha” Moment
Basho's Narrow Road: Two Works by Matsuo Basho: Review
Inventing the New Through the Old: the Essence Of
POETRY Haikai, the Poetics of Intensity and Perception
Matsuo Bashōs Poetic Spaces: Exploring Haikai Intersections Edited by Eleanor Kerkhan Pargrave Macmillan, $95.00
HAIKU/WEATHERGRAM TALK ESCRIBIENTE 4/5/17 Dale Harris
English Translations of Hokku from Matsuo Basho's Oku No Hosomichi
Nature And/Or Poetry? Based on “A Poem of One Hundred Links Composed by Three Poets at Minase” (Minase Sangin Hyakuin, 1488)
Tsukuba Anthology)
Year 5 Home Learning
The Pilgrim's Ideal in Basho's Oku No Hosomichi
Haiku and the Art of Play by Clark Strand
1 RENGA: the Literary Embodiment of Impermanence and Nonself David
Matsuo Bashō's Narrow Road to the Deep North
Spring &Autumn
Translations and Migrations of the Poetic Diary: Roy Kiyooka's Wheels
The Narrow Road to the Deep North Matsuo Basho
The Case of Japanese Poetry
Top View
Periods, Gradually Crystallizing Early Bth-Century Question-And-Answer
A Study on Expressing Renku with 3DCG Animations and Its Evaluation
Waka in the Age of Renga
Lanoue Essay
Kigo Without Season: a Presentation of the Japanese Muki Saijiki
Conversations with Shotetsu (Shotetsu Monogatari) MICHIGAN MONOGRAPH SERIES in JAPANESE STUDIES NUMBER 7
Learning with Waka Poetry: Transmission and Production Of
Garry Gay on Rengay February 28, 2006
SARUMINO Linked Poetry of the Basho School with Haiku Selections
The Spontaneous Order of Words Economics Experiments in Haiku and Renga
Biblio:The Book of Renku.Pdf
Renku, Haiku, and Buddhism Prof. David G. Lanoue, Xavier University
Fujiwara Teika's Hundred-Poem Sequence of the Shoji
Charles Tomlinson
East Asian Studies KC3993. Section 2. Haiku As Poetry, Philosophy, and Community
Two Renga Collaborative Poems
Changing Roles of Japanese Poetry in Medieval Society by Rachel Hazeltine
Renku: a Challenging Word Game from Ancient Times Renku: A
Forte on Ramirez-Christensen, 'Emptiness and Temporality: Buddhism and Medieval Japanese Poetics'
Kigo and Seasonal Reference in Haiku -- Richard Gilbert