Written during the Heian Period at the beginning of the 11th century by Murasaki Shikibu,"The Tale of Genji" is the best known example of Heian women's literature.

The author, Murasaki Shikibu, was born around the year 973 (Ten'en 1), the daughter of Fujiwara Tametoki, a nobleman of middle rank. Her real name is unknown, and it is thought that the name Murasaki Shikibu is taken from "The Lady Murasaki," one of the female protagonists in "The Tale of Genji." Murasaki Shikibu married Fujiwara Nobutaka in 998, and had one daughter by him, Daini no Sanmi. Her husband died three years later. It was most probably around this time that she began work on the "The Tale of Genji." In or around 1005 (Kanko 2), she began service for Empress Akiko, who was the daughter of Fujiwara Michinaga and wife of Emperor Ichijo. The journals she kept during this period reveal much about the life of a courtesan, as well as such details as the fact that her nickname was "the Library of Japanese History," thanks to her knowledge of Chinese writing, at that time required of all men of birth.

This tale is told in the voice of a lady at court, who is herself a character in the novel, seeing and hearing the events she narrates firsthand. It is thought that one reason it is narrated in this manner is because it was the custom at the time for ladies-in-waiting to recite tales to their mistresses, looking at picture scrolls. Of course, this story was not only read aloud, but was also enjoyed alone, or as an example for calligraphy study.

The story is thought to be set several decades before the novel was actually written, in the Engi and Tenryaku Periods, making it historical novel even for its own time. Nevertheless, despite including several historical incidents, it is a fictional account of a unique story. Its plot development was one popular at the time, borrowing much from the "Taketori Monogatari" and "Ise Monogatari" tales, other well-known works at the time.

The work contains 795 poems, using the "hikiuta" technique of quoting one line from an older poem and then building on it. The characters' conversations and emotions are described skillfully, and their psychological side is studied in depth.

The "The Tale of Genji" was very popular in its own time, evidenced by the fact that the author of the "Sarashina Diary" was very fond of it. This popularity meant that its influence on later tales, art, and Noh chants was very large. The "Tale of Genji Picture Scroll" (which can be found on the ¥2000 bill) comes from the late Heian Period, and is highly valued for its deft interpretation of the story. The novel has a long traditional of scholastic study as an example of poetic technique, with the renowned Edo Period scholar Motoori Norinaga famously praising the "comb" poem in the "New Herbs (Part One)" chapter as having a particularly Japanese kind of pathos. ("I fear these combs are scarred and worn/I have used them to summon back an ancient day.")

Since the Meiji Period, "The Tale of Genji" has been translated into modern Japanese by many famous writers, including Yosano Akiko, Tanizaki Jun'ichiro, Enji Fumiko, and Setouchi Jakucho. Popularizations such as Tanabe Seiko's abridged translation, Hashimoto Osamu's "Yohen Genji Monogatari," retelling the story as a confessional from Genji's point of view, and Yamato Kazunori's comic-book version, "And no more shallow dreams" have been well-received. Translations into foreign languages have helped introduce the work abroad, with translations into German, French, Korean, Chinese, and two into English, one by Arthur Waley, and one by Edward G. Seidensticker.

The novel is generally divided into 54 chapters and three parts.

- Part One -
From "The Paulownia Court" to "Wisteria Leaves" (33 chapters)
The story of Genji's rise to glory

- Part Two -
From "New Herbs (Part One)" to "The Wizard" (8 chapters)
The story of Genji's later years, full of nostalgia

- Part Three -
From "His Perfumed Highness" to "The Floating Bridge of Dreams" (13 chapters)
The story of Kaoru and Niou, the generation after Genji's death

The final ten chapters (from "The Lady at the Bridge" to "The Floating Bridge of Dreams") are often grouped together and known as the "Uji Chapters."

A courtesan to the Kiritsubo Emperor becomes the object of his affections, despite their difference in rank. She bears him his second prince, and is therefore hated by Kokiden, daughter of the Minister of the Right and mother of the first prince. She eventually dies. The Kiritsubo Emperor worries about the future of the magnificently beautiful second prince, who has no powerful family backing, and so gives him the last name "Minamoto" and makes him a vassal. This is Shining Genji. Genji is forced into a marriage of convenience with Aoi, the daughter of the Minister of the Left, but is never at ease with her. He falls in love with the one of the Kiritsubo Emperor's concubines, Fujitsubo, the spitting image of his own dead mother. The two eventually begin meeting secretly, and a baby boy is born. The child's parentage is kept secret, and he becomes the tenth prince to the Kiritsubo Emperor, eventually ascending to the throne himself. Thus Genji, despite having at one point moved away from the throne, in essence is returned closer to it, in a manner that quite passes the bounds of common sense.

As though trying to replace the unrequited love he experienced with Fujitsubo, Genji begins romantic relationships with a number of women, starting with Lady Murasaki, who is Fujitsubo's niece, and continuing with the Lady of the Locust Shell, the Lady of the Evening Faces, the Safflower Lady, the Rokujo lady, Oborozukiyo, the Lady of the Orange Blossoms... The list goes on. Some of these relationships have a strong influence on the course of Genji's life, as when he goes into a period of voluntary exile at Suma and Akashi after the ascension of the Suzaku Emperor, the first prince borne by Kokiden. Once back in the capital, however, his own illegitimate child has taken the throne as the Reizei Emperor, and the political winds are blowing in his favor once again. He brings many of the women he has loved to live in a grand residence known as the Rokujo mansion. Genji reaches the zenith of his political power when he has his daughter, the Akashi Princess, who was born in Akashi, presented at court to the Togu Emperor, and is thus accorded all the benefices equivalent to a reigning emperor.

Wishing to abdicate the throne and join the monkhood, the Suzaku Emperor is worried about his daughter, the Third Princess, and decides to put her in Genji's care. Genji is moved by the fact that this girl, like Lady Murasaki, is also a niece of Fujitsubo's, and agrees to marry her. Much to Genji's surprise, the girl is very immature, but this only strenthens his love for Lady Murasaki. The appearance of an official wife of high breeding, however, forces Lady Murasaki into seclusion. Meanwhile, one of the suitors who had been vying for the Third Princess's hand before she married Genji, Kashiwagi, has not given up his hopes of having her, and eventually manages to arrange a tryst with her. The Third Princess bears the illegitimate outcome of this union, and Genji must nevertheless accept the child, Kaoru, as his own, causing him to repent for many of the excesses of his own youth. At the same time, Lady Murasaki, who has long asked Genji's permission to become a nun, dies without getting the opportunity. Genji begins preparations to take the vows himself, while in mourning for Lady Murasaki.

Kaoru, the illegitimate offspring of the Third Princess and Kashiwagi, considers a monastic life, as he is unable to become accustomed to the ways of the world. He begins visiting the Uji residence of theEighth Prince, who has gone into reclusion, and in whom he finds a kindred spirit in these matters, and there meets his daughter, Oigimi, for whom he feels a strong attraction. After the death of the Eighth Prince, Kaoru proposes marriage to Oigimi, but she instead suggests he marry her younger sister, Nakanokimi, suppressing her own feelings for Kaoru. Kaoru, however, urges Niou to marry Nakanokimi, encouraging Oigimi to agree to this marriage. Oigimi dies without having taken back her rejection of Kaoru's marriage proposal.

After the death of Oigimi, Nakanokimi is tormented by Kaoru's persistent wooing, and tells him of Ukifune, her half-sister by a different mother, who resembles Oigimi. Both Kaoru and Niou wind up in a romantic tangle with Ukifune, who finds no way out other than to drown herself. Saved by the bishop of Yokawa, Ukifune goes to Ono and becomes a nun there, refusing to meet Kaoru, who has discovered her whereabouts. Thus the story ends.

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