A structural technique where multiple characters' perspectives and aesthetic sensibilities coexist, showing how cross-cultural works can honor diverse viewpoints within unified artistic vision.
The Tale of Genji operates through polyphonic narrative, shifting between characters' perspectives while maintaining aesthetic coherence through Shikibu's authorial voice and consistent principles of observation. Each character perceives beauty and meaning differently according to their position, experience, and sensibility, yet all exist within a unified artistic world. This technique demonstrates that aesthetic coherence does not require singular perspective or homogeneous viewpoint. For cross-cultural creativity, polyphonic narrative offers a powerful structural model: rather than flattening diverse cultural perspectives into a single voice, artists can maintain multiple aesthetic traditions and viewpoints in dynamic relation. This mirrors how contemporary global culture actually operates—where Japanese, European, African, and Latin American aesthetic principles coexist and influence one another. By studying Shikibu's technique, cross-cultural creators learn to orchestrate multiple traditions' voices without requiring them to abandon their distinctive characteristics. The result is not cultural synthesis that erases difference, but rather a complex, nuanced work where multiple aesthetic traditions maintain their integrity while contributing to a larger artistic vision that transcends any single cultural framework.
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