68
New Reflections
characterizing the work as one primarily concerned with creating “a his-
tory of court customs or courtier culture.”
105
Although Takehana moves on after collapsing together the notions
of the “female” voice and apolitical content, this claim can be unpacked
to suggest that perhaps Tametsune’s decision to use a female narrator is
an escapist move.
106
Rather than assuming that this gambit is reflective
of authorial interest in apolitical subjects, one might consider whether the
selection of a female “informant”—in particular, one who is cloistered
away in service to the palace in her youth—is itself a flight from the po-
litical realities of the present, a retreat to a world where the speaker can-
not address these matters because of her gender. In any case, Takehana
evaluates Tametsune’s motivation for the nearly complete elision of cur-
rent events as a decision inspired by the latter’s awareness of the precari-
ousness of
The New Mirror
’s world.
107
Takehana sees
The New Mirror
as
a testament to a vanishing way of life,
108
and there is something to this
claim. Although not mentioned in the preface amid the talk of “origins”
and “endings,” throughout the work there is a tension between the pre-
sent and the past. The narrator repeatedly juxtaposes the past with more
current events and often assesses the latter as in no way inferior.
109
Yet I propose that we go a step further: like
Ō
ki Masayoshi, I con-
tend that Tametsune does not simply demonstrate the existence of court
105. Takehana,
Imakagami
, 3:617.
106. Sakurai states emphatically that this is not the case (“‘Ōkagami’ ni hajimaru
mono,” 54).
107. Takehana,
Imakagami
, 3:618–19.
108. Takehana,
Imakagami
, 3:619. This is not too diff erent from the position taken
by Sakakibara Kunihiko, who identifies a valorization of the past as one of the ideologi-
cal positions informing
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