Difference between revisions of "Tōson Shimazaki" - New World Encyclopedia

From New World Encyclopedia
(New page: {{Infobox Writer <!-- for more information see Template:Infobox Writer/doc —> | name = Tōson Shimazaki | image = Shimazaki Toson.jpg | caption = Tōson Shimazaki | ...)
 
Line 14: Line 14:
 
| influenced  =  
 
| influenced  =  
 
}}
 
}}
{{nihongo|'''Tōson Shimazaki'''|島崎 藤村|Shimazaki Tōson|extra=[[25 March]] [[1872]] [[22 August]] [[1943]]}} is the [[pen-name]] of a [[Japanese author]], active in the [[Meiji period|Meiji]], [[Taisho period|Taisho]] and early [[Showa period]] [[Japan]]. He began his career as a poet, but went on to establish himself as the major proponent of [[Naturalism (literature)|naturalism]] in Japanese literature. His real name was Shimazaki Haruki.
+
'''Tōson Shimazaki''' (島崎 藤村; Shimazaki Tōson; March 25, 1872 – August 22, 1943) is the [[pen-name]] of Shimazaki Haruki, a [[Japanese author]], active in [[Meiji period|Meiji]], [[Taisho period|Taisho]] and early [[Showa period]] [[Japan]]. Tōson’s family had, for generations, maintained an inn where the daimyo (lords) stayed during their mandatory journeys back and forth from the capital. As a youth he observed the decline of his family as Japan underwent rapid modernization. 
 +
Tōson began his career as a poet, but went on to establish himself as the major proponent of [[Naturalism (literature)|naturalism]] in Japanese literature. He was lauded by [[literary critic]]s for the establishment of a new Japanese verse form, and as one of the creators of the [[Meiji Romanticism]] (明治浪漫主義, ''Meiji Rōman Shugi'') literary movement. Tōson’s first novel, Hakai (The Broken Commandment, 1906) is regarded as the first Japanese [[Naturalism (literature)|naturalist]] novel. His later novels, ''Haru'' (春 ''Spring'', 1908), ''Ie'' (家, ''Family'', 1910-1911), ''Shinsei'' (新生 ''New Life'', 1918-1919), ''Yoakemae'' (1935; “Before the Dawn”), and Toho no Mon (“Gate to the East”),  were all autobiographical in character. His fiction highlighted the conflict between old and new values as Japan entered a period of aggressive modernization after the Meiji Restoration.  
  
 
==Early life==
 
==Early life==
Tōson was born in what is now part of the city of [[Nakatsugawa, Gifu|Nakatsugawa]], [[Gifu Prefecture]] and spent his childhood in the old post town of [[Magome-juku]] in the countryside of the [[Kiso District, Nagano|Kiso District]], which he left in 1881. He wrote about many aspects of life in this area, including in his most famous novel ''[[Before the Dawn]]'', which was modeled on the life of his father, Shimazaki Masaki, who went insane and died by the time Tōson was fourteen, leading to Tōson being raised by friends of his family. Later, his oldest sister would also die from mental disorders. Tōson later described his nature as "melancholy inherited from my parents."
+
Shimazaki Haruki was born March 25, 1872, in Magome Juku, a bustling post town on the Nakasendo Highway which is now part of the city of Nakatsugawa, [[Gifu Prefecture]], Japan. He was the youngest of four sons and three daughters. His father, Masaki Shimazaki, was the last of a well-established family that had run an officially appointed inn for daimyo (Japanese lords) for generations. Members of the family were also prosperous wholesale merchants and village headmen.<ref>ikjeld.com, Biography of Shimazaki, Toson. http://www.ikjeld.com/files/biographies/shimazaki_toson.html  Retrieved June 16, 2008</ref>
  
Tōson graduated from [[Meiji Gakuin University]] in 1891, and became interested in literature through his friendship with essayist and translator [[Kochō Baba]] (馬場孤蝶 ''Baba Kochō'') and [[Shūkotsu Togawa]] (戸川秋骨 ''Togawa Shūkotsu''). He joined a literary group associated with the [[literary magazine]] ''Bungakukai'' (文學界) and he also began to contribute translations to ''Jogaku Zasshi'' (女学雑誌 ''Magazine of Women's Learning'').  
+
Tōson spent his childhood in Magome-juku, and often wrote about the area in his later works. His most famous novel ''[[Before the Dawn]],'' was modeled on the life of his father, Shimazaki Masaki, who went insane and died before Tōson was fourteen, leaving him to be raised by friends of the family. Later, his oldest sister also died after suffering from mental disorders. Tōson once described his nature as "melancholy inherited from my parents."
  
He moved from Tokyo to [[Sendai, Miyagi|Sendai]] in northern Japan to accept a teaching position, but continued to write as a hobby. His first verse collection, ''Wakanashū'' (若菜集 ''Collection of Young Herbs'', 1897) was published while he was in Sendai and launched him on his future career.
+
==Education and first novel==
  
However, around the same time, Tōson was discovered to be having an affair with one of his female students, which led to his resignation from the school. The suicide of his close friend, the Romantic writer [[Kitamura Tokoku]], also came as a great shock and Tōson moved back to Tokyo.
+
Tōson studied in Tokyo at Meiji Gakuin University, graduating in 1891. While there, he was baptized as a Christian, though Christianity did not have an influence on his life or his thought. Through his friendship with essayist and translator [[Kochō Baba]] (馬場孤蝶 ''Baba Kochō'') and [[Shūkotsu Togawa]] (戸川秋骨 ''Togawa Shūkotsu''), Tōson became interested in literature. He joined a literary group and was a founder of the [[literary magazine]] ''Bungakukai'' (文學界) in 1893, along with Toukoku Kitamura and others.<reef>Ibid.</ref> He also began to contribute translations to ''Jogaku Zasshi'' (女学雑誌, ''Magazine of Women's Learning'').
 +
In 1892, Tōson began teaching at Meiji Jogakko (Meiji Girls School). He moved from Tokyo to [[Sendai, Miyagi|Sendai]] in northern Japan to accept a teaching position at the Komoro Private School, but continued to write as a hobby. His first verse collection, ''Wakanashū'' (若菜集 ''Collection of Young Herbs'', 1897), published while he was in Sendai,  was regarded at the time as the beginning of modern Japanese poetry. While working as a teacher in Sendai he also wrote Chikuma River Sketches.
 +
Around this time, Tōson was discovered to be having an affair with one of his female students, and forced to resign from the school. The suicide of his close friend, the romantic writer [[Kitamura Tokoku]], came as a great shock and Tōson moved back to Tokyo. His first novel, Hakai (The Broken Commandment), published in [[1906]], established his reputation as a novelist. It was the story of a ''[[burakumin]]'' (Japanese “untouchable” caste) schoolteacher, who kept his status as a social outcast secret until near the end of the story. While Tōson was writing, each of his three children died of illness. 
  
==Literary career==   
+
==Literary career==
Although Tōson was lauded by [[literary critic]]s for the establishment of a new Japanese verse form in ''Wakanashu'' and as one of the creators of the [[Meiji Romanticism]] (明治浪漫主義 ''Meiji Rōman Shugi'') literary movement, he soon turned his talents to prose fiction.
+
   
 +
His second novel, ''Haru'' (春 ''Spring'', 1908) was a sentimental autobiographical account of his youthful days with the ''Bungakukai.'' His third novel, ''Ie'' (家, ''Family'', 1910-1911), considered by many to be his masterpiece, depicted the gradual decline of two provincial families to whom the protagonist was related. Tōson portrayed the pressures placed by modernization on his own family. 
  
His first novel, [[The Broken Commandment]] was published in [[1906]]. It was considered a landmark in Japanese realism and is thus regarded as the first Japanese [[Naturalism (literature)|naturalist]] novel. It is a story of a ''[[burakumin]]'' schoolteacher, who keeps his out-caste status secret until near the end of the story. While he was writing, each of his three children died of illness.
+
Tōson’s next novel, ''Shinsei'' (新生 ''New Life'', 1918-1919), created a public scandal. A more emotional work than ''Ie,'' it was an autobiographical account of his own extramarital relations with his niece, Komako, and the way in which her father (his elder brother), knowing of the incestuous affair, concealed it. When Komako became pregnant, Tōson fled to [[France]] to avoid confrontation with his relatives, abandoning the girl. Tōson attempted to justify his behavior by revealing that his father had committed a similar sin and suggesting that he could not avoid the curse of his lineage. The general public censured Tōson for his behavior and for his attempt to capitalize on the disgraceful incident by turning it into a novel, which was perceived as a gross vulgarity.
  
His second novel, ''Haru'' (''Spring'', 1908) was much weaker and is a lyrical and sentimental autobiographical account of his youthful days with the ''Bungakukai''.
+
On his return to Japan, Tōson accepted a teaching post at [[Waseda University]]. In 1928, he began his research for ''Yoakemae'' (1935; “Before the Dawn”), his greatest work and one of the masterpieces of modern Japanese literature. It was a semi-historical novel about the [[Meiji Restoration]] from the point of view of a provincial loyalist, Aoyama Hanzo, a thinly veiled representation of his father. The protagonist eventually dies in bitterness and disappointment, convinced that the cause of pure patriotism has been betrayed. ''Yoakemae'' was serialized in the literary magazine ''[[Chūōkōron]]'' over a six-year period and was later released as a two-part novel.
  
His third novel, ''Ie'' (家 ''Family'', 1910-1911) is considered by many to be his masterpiece. It depicts the slow moving decline of two provincial families to whom the protagonist is related.  
+
His final novel, Toho no Mon (“Gate to the East”), incomplete at his death, seemed to draw on the Buddhist wisdom of medieval Japan as a solution to the cultural confusion and spiritual emptiness of the present.
  
Tōson created a major scandal with his next novel, ''Shinsei'' (新生 ''New Life'', 1918-1919). A more emotional work than ''Ie'', it is an autobiographical account of his own extramarital relations with his niece, Komako, and the knowledge that her father (his elder brother) knew of the incestuous affair, but concealed it. When Komako became pregnant, Tōson fled to [[France]] to avoid the confrontation with his relatives, abandoning the girl. Tōson attempts to justify his behavior by revealing that his father had committed a similar sin and that he could not avoid the curse of his lineage. The general public did not see it that way and Tōson was censured on many fronts for his behavior and for what was perceived a gross vulgarity on attempting to capitalize on the disgraceful incident by turning it into a novel.
+
In 1935, Tōson became the founding chairman of the Japanese chapter of the [[International PEN]] organization. Tōson died of a stroke at the age of 71, in 1943. His grave is at the temple of Jifuku-ji, in [[Oiso, Kanagawa|Oiso]], [[Kanagawa Prefecture]].
  
On his return to Japan, Tōson accepted a teaching post at [[Waseda University]]. He then wrote ''Yoakemae'' starting in 1929, a semi-historical novel about the [[Meiji Restoration]] from the point of view of a provincial loyalist, who is a thinly veiled representation of his father. Written unevenly, the protagonist dies in bitterness and disappointment. It was serialized in the literary magazine ''[[Chūōkōron]]'' over a six-year period and was later released as a two-part novel.
+
==Literary innovation==
 +
Tōson began his career as a poet, but went on to establish himself as the major proponent of [[Naturalism (literature)|naturalism]] in Japanese literature. The influence of Western poetry, with its varying lengths and meters, and sometimes nonexistent rhymes, led to the creation of new Japanese literary forms. From Western literature, Japanese poets and writers learned to use modern, everyday language, and to write about aspects of human experience that had never been mentioned in traditional Japanese poetry and literature. Tōson was lauded by [[literary critic]]s for the establishment of a new Japanese verse form in ''Wakanashu,'' and as one of the creators of the [[Meiji Romanticism]] (明治浪漫主義, ''Meiji Rōman Shugi'') literary movement.  
  
In 1935, Tōson became the founding chairman of the Japanese chapter of the [[International PEN]] organization. Tōson died of a stroke at the age of 71, in 1943. His grave is at the temple of Jifuku-ji, in [[Oiso, Kanagawa|Oiso]], [[Kanagawa Prefecture]].
+
Tōson’s first novel, Hakai (The Broken Commandment, 1906) was considered a landmark in Japanese realism and is regarded as the first Japanese [[Naturalism (literature)|naturalist]] novel. His later novels were all autobiographical in character. His fiction highlighted the conflict between old and new values as Japan entered a period of aggressive modernization after the Meiji Restoration.
 +
<blockquote> First Love <br>
 +
<br>
 +
you had swept back your bangs for the first time<br>
 +
when I saw you under the apple tree<br>
 +
the flower-comb in your hair<br>
 +
I thought you yourself were a flower too. <br>
 +
<br>
 +
you stretched out your pale white hand gently<br>
 +
giving me an apple: <br>
 +
like the ripening red of the autumn fruit<br>
 +
my first feeling of love<br>
 +
<br>
 +
my sigh, without any awareness<br>
 +
touched your hair<br>
 +
the joys of love's offerings<br>
 +
drinking your love... <br>
 +
<br>
 +
under a tree in the apple orchard<br>
 +
nature's narrow road<br>
 +
who left this token here? <br>
 +
your question gave me a piercing pleasure.  
  
 +
Shimazaki Toson  http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/first-love-3/  Retrieved June 16, 2008</blockquote>
 
==Published Works==
 
==Published Works==
 
Tōson's major works include:
 
Tōson's major works include:
Line 52: Line 79:
 
{{reflist|2}}
 
{{reflist|2}}
 
* Bourdaghs, Michael. (2003). ''The Dawn That Never Comes: Shimazaki Toson and Japanese Nationalism''. New York: [[Columbia University Press]].  ISBN 0-2311-2980-7
 
* Bourdaghs, Michael. (2003). ''The Dawn That Never Comes: Shimazaki Toson and Japanese Nationalism''. New York: [[Columbia University Press]].  ISBN 0-2311-2980-7
 +
* Walker, Janet A. (1979). The Japanese novel of the Meiji period and the ideal of individualism. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0691064008 ISBN 9780691064000
 
* [[Edwin McClellan|McClellan]], Edwin. (1969). ''Two Japanese Novelists: Soseki & Toson.'' Chicago: [[University of Chicago Press]].  10-ISBN 0-2265-5652-2  13-ISBN 978-0-2265-5652-9 (cloth) [reprinted by Tuttle Publishing, Tokyo, 1971-2004. 10-ISBN 0-8048-3340-0 13-ISBN 978-0-8048-3340-0 (paper)]
 
* [[Edwin McClellan|McClellan]], Edwin. (1969). ''Two Japanese Novelists: Soseki & Toson.'' Chicago: [[University of Chicago Press]].  10-ISBN 0-2265-5652-2  13-ISBN 978-0-2265-5652-9 (cloth) [reprinted by Tuttle Publishing, Tokyo, 1971-2004. 10-ISBN 0-8048-3340-0 13-ISBN 978-0-8048-3340-0 (paper)]
 
* Shimazaki Toson. [Trans. [[William E. Naff]]] (1987). ''Before the Dawn''. Honolulu: [[University of Hawaii Press]].  ISBN 0-8248-0914-9
 
* Shimazaki Toson. [Trans. [[William E. Naff]]] (1987). ''Before the Dawn''. Honolulu: [[University of Hawaii Press]].  ISBN 0-8248-0914-9
Line 70: Line 98:
 
[[Category:Deaths by cerebral hemorrhage]]
 
[[Category:Deaths by cerebral hemorrhage]]
  
[[de:Shimazaki Tōson]]
 
[[ja:島崎藤村]]
 
  
  
 
{{credits|Toson_Shimazaki|212295580|}}
 
{{credits|Toson_Shimazaki|212295580|}}

Revision as of 15:41, 17 June 2008

Tōson Shimazaki
Shimazaki Toson.jpg
Tōson Shimazaki
Born March 25 1872(1872-03-25)
Nakatsugawa, Gifu, Japan
Died 22 August 1943 (aged 71)
Tokyo, Japan
Occupation Writer
Genres novels
Literary movement naturalism

Tōson Shimazaki (島崎 藤村; Shimazaki Tōson; March 25, 1872 – August 22, 1943) is the pen-name of Shimazaki Haruki, a Japanese author, active in Meiji, Taisho and early Showa period Japan. Tōson’s family had, for generations, maintained an inn where the daimyo (lords) stayed during their mandatory journeys back and forth from the capital. As a youth he observed the decline of his family as Japan underwent rapid modernization. Tōson began his career as a poet, but went on to establish himself as the major proponent of naturalism in Japanese literature. He was lauded by literary critics for the establishment of a new Japanese verse form, and as one of the creators of the Meiji Romanticism (明治浪漫主義, Meiji Rōman Shugi) literary movement. Tōson’s first novel, Hakai (The Broken Commandment, 1906) is regarded as the first Japanese naturalist novel. His later novels, Haru (春 Spring, 1908), Ie (家, Family, 1910-1911), Shinsei (新生 New Life, 1918-1919), Yoakemae (1935; “Before the Dawn”), and Toho no Mon (“Gate to the East”), were all autobiographical in character. His fiction highlighted the conflict between old and new values as Japan entered a period of aggressive modernization after the Meiji Restoration.

Early life

Shimazaki Haruki was born March 25, 1872, in Magome Juku, a bustling post town on the Nakasendo Highway which is now part of the city of Nakatsugawa, Gifu Prefecture, Japan. He was the youngest of four sons and three daughters. His father, Masaki Shimazaki, was the last of a well-established family that had run an officially appointed inn for daimyo (Japanese lords) for generations. Members of the family were also prosperous wholesale merchants and village headmen.[1]

Tōson spent his childhood in Magome-juku, and often wrote about the area in his later works. His most famous novel Before the Dawn, was modeled on the life of his father, Shimazaki Masaki, who went insane and died before Tōson was fourteen, leaving him to be raised by friends of the family. Later, his oldest sister also died after suffering from mental disorders. Tōson once described his nature as "melancholy inherited from my parents."

Education and first novel

Tōson studied in Tokyo at Meiji Gakuin University, graduating in 1891. While there, he was baptized as a Christian, though Christianity did not have an influence on his life or his thought. Through his friendship with essayist and translator Kochō Baba (馬場孤蝶 Baba Kochō) and Shūkotsu Togawa (戸川秋骨 Togawa Shūkotsu), Tōson became interested in literature. He joined a literary group and was a founder of the literary magazine Bungakukai (文學界) in 1893, along with Toukoku Kitamura and others.<reef>Ibid.</ref> He also began to contribute translations to Jogaku Zasshi (女学雑誌, Magazine of Women's Learning). In 1892, Tōson began teaching at Meiji Jogakko (Meiji Girls School). He moved from Tokyo to Sendai in northern Japan to accept a teaching position at the Komoro Private School, but continued to write as a hobby. His first verse collection, Wakanashū (若菜集 Collection of Young Herbs, 1897), published while he was in Sendai, was regarded at the time as the beginning of modern Japanese poetry. While working as a teacher in Sendai he also wrote Chikuma River Sketches. Around this time, Tōson was discovered to be having an affair with one of his female students, and forced to resign from the school. The suicide of his close friend, the romantic writer Kitamura Tokoku, came as a great shock and Tōson moved back to Tokyo. His first novel, Hakai (The Broken Commandment), published in 1906, established his reputation as a novelist. It was the story of a burakumin (Japanese “untouchable” caste) schoolteacher, who kept his status as a social outcast secret until near the end of the story. While Tōson was writing, each of his three children died of illness.

Literary career

His second novel, Haru (春 Spring, 1908) was a sentimental autobiographical account of his youthful days with the Bungakukai. His third novel, Ie (家, Family, 1910-1911), considered by many to be his masterpiece, depicted the gradual decline of two provincial families to whom the protagonist was related. Tōson portrayed the pressures placed by modernization on his own family.

Tōson’s next novel, Shinsei (新生 New Life, 1918-1919), created a public scandal. A more emotional work than Ie, it was an autobiographical account of his own extramarital relations with his niece, Komako, and the way in which her father (his elder brother), knowing of the incestuous affair, concealed it. When Komako became pregnant, Tōson fled to France to avoid confrontation with his relatives, abandoning the girl. Tōson attempted to justify his behavior by revealing that his father had committed a similar sin and suggesting that he could not avoid the curse of his lineage. The general public censured Tōson for his behavior and for his attempt to capitalize on the disgraceful incident by turning it into a novel, which was perceived as a gross vulgarity.

On his return to Japan, Tōson accepted a teaching post at Waseda University. In 1928, he began his research for Yoakemae (1935; “Before the Dawn”), his greatest work and one of the masterpieces of modern Japanese literature. It was a semi-historical novel about the Meiji Restoration from the point of view of a provincial loyalist, Aoyama Hanzo, a thinly veiled representation of his father. The protagonist eventually dies in bitterness and disappointment, convinced that the cause of pure patriotism has been betrayed. Yoakemae was serialized in the literary magazine Chūōkōron over a six-year period and was later released as a two-part novel.

His final novel, Toho no Mon (“Gate to the East”), incomplete at his death, seemed to draw on the Buddhist wisdom of medieval Japan as a solution to the cultural confusion and spiritual emptiness of the present.

In 1935, Tōson became the founding chairman of the Japanese chapter of the International PEN organization. Tōson died of a stroke at the age of 71, in 1943. His grave is at the temple of Jifuku-ji, in Oiso, Kanagawa Prefecture.

Literary innovation

Tōson began his career as a poet, but went on to establish himself as the major proponent of naturalism in Japanese literature. The influence of Western poetry, with its varying lengths and meters, and sometimes nonexistent rhymes, led to the creation of new Japanese literary forms. From Western literature, Japanese poets and writers learned to use modern, everyday language, and to write about aspects of human experience that had never been mentioned in traditional Japanese poetry and literature. Tōson was lauded by literary critics for the establishment of a new Japanese verse form in Wakanashu, and as one of the creators of the Meiji Romanticism (明治浪漫主義, Meiji Rōman Shugi) literary movement.

Tōson’s first novel, Hakai (The Broken Commandment, 1906) was considered a landmark in Japanese realism and is regarded as the first Japanese naturalist novel. His later novels were all autobiographical in character. His fiction highlighted the conflict between old and new values as Japan entered a period of aggressive modernization after the Meiji Restoration.

First Love


you had swept back your bangs for the first time
when I saw you under the apple tree
the flower-comb in your hair
I thought you yourself were a flower too.

you stretched out your pale white hand gently
giving me an apple:
like the ripening red of the autumn fruit
my first feeling of love

my sigh, without any awareness
touched your hair
the joys of love's offerings
drinking your love...

under a tree in the apple orchard
nature's narrow road
who left this token here?
your question gave me a piercing pleasure.

Shimazaki Toson http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/first-love-3/ Retrieved June 16, 2008

Published Works

Tōson's major works include:

  • Wakanashū (若菜集 Collection of Young Herbs)
  • The Broken Commandment (破戒 Hakai)
  • Haru (春 Spring)
  • Ie (家 Family)
  • Shinsei (新生 New Life)
  • Before the Dawn (夜明け前 Yoakemae)

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  1. ikjeld.com, Biography of Shimazaki, Toson. http://www.ikjeld.com/files/biographies/shimazaki_toson.html Retrieved June 16, 2008
  • Bourdaghs, Michael. (2003). The Dawn That Never Comes: Shimazaki Toson and Japanese Nationalism. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-2311-2980-7
  • Walker, Janet A. (1979). The Japanese novel of the Meiji period and the ideal of individualism. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0691064008 ISBN 9780691064000
  • McClellan, Edwin. (1969). Two Japanese Novelists: Soseki & Toson. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 10-ISBN 0-2265-5652-2 13-ISBN 978-0-2265-5652-9 (cloth) [reprinted by Tuttle Publishing, Tokyo, 1971-2004. 10-ISBN 0-8048-3340-0 13-ISBN 978-0-8048-3340-0 (paper)]
  • Shimazaki Toson. [Trans. William E. Naff] (1987). Before the Dawn. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 0-8248-0914-9
  • Shimazaki Toson. [Trans. Kenneth Stone] (1995). Broken Commandment. Tokyo: University of Tokyo Press. ISBN 0-8600-8191-5

External links


Credits

New World Encyclopedia writers and editors rewrote and completed the Wikipedia article in accordance with New World Encyclopedia standards. This article abides by terms of the Creative Commons CC-by-sa 3.0 License (CC-by-sa), which may be used and disseminated with proper attribution. Credit is due under the terms of this license that can reference both the New World Encyclopedia contributors and the selfless volunteer contributors of the Wikimedia Foundation. To cite this article click here for a list of acceptable citing formats.The history of earlier contributions by wikipedians is accessible to researchers here:

The history of this article since it was imported to New World Encyclopedia:

Note: Some restrictions may apply to use of individual images which are separately licensed.