Kamo no Yasunori no Musume (賀茂保憲女) was the second daughter of the Heian period onmyōji Kamo no Yasunori. She lived during the tenth century. She is conventionally known simply as "the daughter [musume] of Kamo no Yasunori"; her personal name has been lost.
In her youth, she suffered from a disease that marred her appearance.[1] She became a prolific poet, earning a reputation for her talent.[2] Many of her poems were autobiographical in nature. They are collected as the Kamo no Yasunori no Musume Shū, also known as the Kamo no Yasunori no Jo Shū.
After her lifetime, her poetry faded from study for a time; in 1999, scholar Edith Sarra counted her among "[Japanese] women writers who had been hitherto overlooked or scanted."[3] However, her poems have continued to be republished in collections.[4]
References
- ↑ Hisamatsu, Sen'ichi. Murasaki Shikibu: the greatest lady writer in Japanese literature. Tokyo: Japanese National Commission for Unesco, 1970. 137-138.
- ↑ Japanese Woman's Commission for the World's Columbian Exposition. Japanese Women. Chicago: A. C. McClurg & Co., 1893. 49.
- ↑ Sarra, Edith. Fictions of Femininity: Literary Inventions of Gender in Japanese Court Women's Memoirs. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1999. 280.
- ↑ Kamo no Yasunori no Musume Shū. Compendium of Literature Poems (和歌文学大系, Waka Bungaku Taikei): 20. (ISBN 4625413001)