The Japanese Family Storehouse

E414602

The Japanese Family Storehouse is a late 17th-century work by Ihara Saikaku that vividly portrays the lives, values, and economic concerns of Japan’s urban merchant class through a series of realistic, often satirical stories.

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The Japanese Family Storehouse canonical 1

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Statements (29)

Predicate Object
instanceOf literary work
short story collection
author Ihara Saikaku
countryOfOrigin Japan
depicts chōnin (townspeople) culture
economic concerns of merchants
family life of merchants
moral values of the merchant class
urban merchant class in Japan
genre realist fiction
satirical literature
ukiyo-zōshi
hasInfluenceOn depictions of merchant ethics in Japanese literature
later Japanese realist prose
literaryMovement ukiyo-zōshi tradition
literaryPeriod late 17th century
narrativeForm series of short stories
narrativeStyle realistic
satirical
originalLanguage Japanese
partOf Ihara Saikaku’s merchant-class works
setting Japanese urban centers
theme family responsibility
money and commerce
moral lessons about wealth
social satire
thrift and frugality
timePeriodDescribed Edo period
surface form: Edo period Japan
workExampleOf portrayal of chōnin ethics in Edo literature

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Ihara Saikaku notableWork The Japanese Family Storehouse