The Shiki Haikusphere is the new form of the Shiki Internet Haiku Salon web site, now hosted at Ehime University, Japan, and brought to us by the continued efforts of the Shiki Team in Matsuyama.
Summary of a talk by Prof. Eleanor Kerkham, of the University of Maryland.
Brazilian haiku site, largely in Portuguese, but with substantial information about haiku and representation in English of many International haiku poets. Webmaster, Rosa Clemente.
Essays, criticisms, analyses..., haiku gallery, book reviews, selected haiku etc. Bilingual (Serbian/English). Webmaster Saša Važić. (From home, click on British flag for English.)
Millikin University Haiku web site hosts haiku projects, research and publications for students, faculty and the haiku community. This web site is a learning community forum for publishing haiku studies, for supporting haiku-related scholarship, and for expanding the haiku learning experiences beyond the physical limits of the residential campus. Webmaster Randy Brooks.
This is the English home-page of the Matsuo Basho Memorial Museum in his hometown, Ueno City, Mie Prefecture. Sponsors an annual English-language haiku contest with an August deadline, in connection with its Basho Festival in October each year.
Gateway to the English-language pages of the museum in Tokyo run by the Haiku Poets Association, Japan's largest haiku organization.
A thorough and highly technical discussion of serious haiku form in English, by Keiko Imaoka, a Japanese-American poet who writes in both languages. Highly recommended for advanced poets.
This site gives information on the substantial literary prizes given as a result of the Matsuyama Declaration of 1999. Watch here for award announcements. Maintained by the Ehime Culture Foundation, Ehime Prefecture, Japan.
A group of pages devoted to Issa and his haiku, prepared by Yoshi Mikami. In both Japanese and English.
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