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1996 Fiscal Year Final Research Report Summary

Yeats and Kipling : Similarities and Differences in their View of Asia

Research Project

Project/Area Number 07610468
Research Category

Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (C)

Allocation TypeSingle-year Grants
Section一般
Research Field 英語・英米文学
Research InstitutionHyogo University of Teacher Education

Principal Investigator

YAMASAKI Hiroyuki  Hyogo University of Teacher Education, School Education, Professor, 学校教育学部, 教授 (50131678)

Project Period (FY) 1995 – 1996
KeywordsKipling / Yeats / View of Asia / Understanding Other Cultures / Cultural Value / Religion / Orientalism / Culture and Literature
Research Abstract

The aim of the present research project is to clarify similarities and differences in views of Asian religions between an Anglo-Irish writer W.B.Yeats (1865-1939) and an Anglo-Indian writer Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936). We have chiefly examined how the two writers use the terms God, Gods and gods in their poems and fictions, and reached the following conclusions : (1) Kipling for the most part refers to the divinities of Hinduism not as gods, but as Gods, whereas he refers to the divinity of Christianity either as God or Gods. The former fact suggests that he pays his deep respect to Hinduism, one of the Asian religions. The latter fact suggests that he consciously or unconsciously satirizes the historical conflict between Catholicism and Protestantism which can be interpreted to have picked and chosen their own God from among Gods and have worshiped it in their own manner. These facts ultimately reflect his relativistic sense that both Christianity as monotheism and Asian religions as polytheism are equal to each other in terms of cultural value. (2) Unlike Kipling, Yeats consistently refers to Christian divinity as God, and to Asian ones as gods. In this sense, his naming of divinities is traditional. Also, unlike Kipling, he is quite critical both of Christianity and Asian religions because he thinks that they all compel worshipers to abandon their own self to their God or gods. (3) In comparison with Kipling, Yeats, who sticks stubbornly to his own self, lack a sympathy to Asian religions. Yeats is more Europe-oriented (or classical Greek-oriented) than Kipling.

  • Research Products

    (2 results)

All Other

All Publications (2 results)

  • [Publications] 山崎,弘行: "キップリングの詩の差異と反復" SAP(日本詩学会会誌). 6. 24-29 (1996)

    • Description
      「研究成果報告書概要(和文)」より
  • [Publications] YAMASAKI,Hiroyuki: ""Difference and Repetition in kipling's Poems"" SAP. vol.6. 24-29 (1996)

    • Description
      「研究成果報告書概要(欧文)」より

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Published: 1999-03-09  

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