Yugiri (disputed paternity in narrative context)

E1043130

Yugiri is a prominent character in The Tale of Genji whose birth and lineage are clouded by uncertainty over whether his true father is Genji or To no Chujo.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

Observed surface forms (1)

Surface form Occurrences
Yugiri 0

Statements (40)

Predicate Object
instanceOf character in The Tale of Genji
fictional character
appearsIn The Tale of Genji NERFINISHED
appearsInChapter Aoi NERFINISHED
Sakaki NERFINISHED
Yugiri NERFINISHED
associatedWith Aoi no Ue NERFINISHED
Hikaru Genji NERFINISHED
To no Chujo NERFINISHED
birthCircumstances paternity disputed between Hikaru Genji and To no Chujo
createdBy Murasaki Shikibu NERFINISHED
culture Heian Japan NERFINISHED
fictionalUniverse Heian-period court society
firstAppearance early chapters of The Tale of Genji
gender male
hasAllegedFather To no Chujo NERFINISHED
hasMother Aoi no Ue NERFINISHED
hasPossibleBiologicalFather Hikaru Genji NERFINISHED
To no Chujo NERFINISHED
hasPutativeFather Hikaru Genji NERFINISHED
languageOfWork Classical Japanese
legitimacyStatus socially recognized as Genji’s son
literaryPeriod Heian period literature
literarySignificance illustrates theme of uncertain fatherhood in classical Japanese literature
medium prose fiction
narrativeFunction embodies consequences of Genji and To no Chujo rivalry
narrativeTheme family rivalry
legitimacy and lineage
uncertain paternity
nationality Japanese (fictional)
paternityStatus ambiguous within the narrative
relationshipToGenji son (socially acknowledged)
relationshipToToNoChujo possible biological son GENERATED
roleInPlot links the households of Genji and To no Chujo
settingTime Heian period NERFINISHED
usedAsExampleOf Heian aristocratic concerns with lineage
workGenre court romance
monogatari
workLocation Heian-kyō (Kyoto) (fictionalized) NERFINISHED
workTitleInJapanese 源氏物語 NERFINISHED

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

To no Chujo hasChild Yugiri (disputed paternity in narrative context)