0:00:00.483,0:00:02.282 If you've ever fallen in love with a novel 0:00:02.282,0:00:03.131 you know the moment: 0:00:03.131,0:00:04.040 you look at the clock, 0:00:04.040,0:00:04.700 it's one in the morning, 0:00:04.700,0:00:06.231 and you still can't put the book down. 0:00:06.231,0:00:07.442 You've been pulled into a world 0:00:07.442,0:00:09.582 conjured from someone else's imagination, 0:00:09.582,0:00:10.830 where the thoughts and feelings 0:00:10.830,0:00:11.772 of the people on the pages 0:00:11.772,0:00:13.182 are as real as your own. 0:00:13.722,0:00:15.052 It's hard to imagine a time 0:00:15.052,0:00:16.993 before novels as we know them existed -- 0:00:16.993,0:00:18.781 but there was, in fact, a first novel. 0:00:18.781,0:00:19.898 And if we want to understand 0:00:19.898,0:00:20.952 how it came into being, 0:00:20.952,0:00:21.547 we have to look 0:00:21.547,0:00:23.062 more than 1000 years into the past, 0:00:23.062,0:00:25.093 at the writing desk of one woman. 0:00:25.933,0:00:26.933 Her name was Murasaki Shikibu, 0:00:26.933,0:00:28.359 or at least, 0:00:28.359,0:00:30.324 that's the only name we can give her now. 0:00:30.324,0:00:32.282 Born into an aristocratic Japanese family 0:00:32.282,0:00:34.002 sometime in the 970s, 0:00:34.002,0:00:35.942 she lived in at time when the name of women 0:00:35.942,0:00:37.480 were rarely recorded. 0:00:37.480,0:00:39.223 Instead, well-born women like Murasaki 0:00:39.223,0:00:40.192 were given nicknames: 0:00:40.192,0:00:42.033 usually related to the rank or position 0:00:42.033,0:00:43.743 of a close male relative. 0:00:43.743,0:00:45.843 She lived in an intensely-cloistered world 0:00:45.843,0:00:47.441 where women were constantly shielded 0:00:47.441,0:00:49.583 from public view by screens or curtains. 0:00:49.583,0:00:50.803 Sometimes, it was easier to identify 0:00:50.803,0:00:53.254 an aristocratic woman by the distinctive pattern 0:00:53.254,0:00:56.063 of a protruding sleeve than by her face. 0:00:56.063,0:00:58.473 Despite the often suffocating limitations 0:00:58.473,0:00:59.533 on their lives, 0:00:59.533,0:01:01.312 women like Murasaki were educated 0:01:01.312,0:01:03.413 and expected to be highly literate. 0:01:03.413,0:01:04.663 The granddaughter of a famous poet 0:01:04.663,0:01:06.101 and the daughter of a scholar, 0:01:06.101,0:01:07.734 Murasaki became conversant in Japanese 0:01:07.734,0:01:09.863 and Chinese literature so quickly, 0:01:09.863,0:01:12.843 she was considered something of a literary prodigy. 0:01:12.843,0:01:14.624 In her diary, Murasaki recorded 0:01:14.624,0:01:16.434 her father's reactions when he realized 0:01:16.434,0:01:18.671 exactly how talented she was. 0:01:18.671,0:01:19.371 He said, 0:01:19.371,0:01:20.168 "Just my luck. 0:01:20.168,0:01:22.174 What a pity she was not born a man." 0:01:22.174,0:01:23.674 In her early twenties, she married a man 0:01:23.674,0:01:25.184 old enough to be her father, 0:01:25.184,0:01:27.067 who died only two years later, 0:01:27.067,0:01:28.805 but not before they had a daughter. 0:01:28.805,0:01:29.954 Instead of marrying again, 0:01:29.954,0:01:31.245 the gifted young widow and mother 0:01:31.245,0:01:33.425 began working on The Tale of Genji, 0:01:33.425,0:01:35.395 an intricate saga of romance and intrigue, 0:01:35.395,0:01:37.454 in the life of an imperial Prince. 0:01:37.454,0:01:38.774 The Tale of Genji is often considered 0:01:38.774,0:01:40.213 the first modern novel, 0:01:40.213,0:01:41.573 because Murasaki offered readers 0:01:41.573,0:01:42.954 not just a chronicle of events, 0:01:42.954,0:01:45.996 but deep psychological insight into the characters 0:01:45.996,0:01:47.943 and their inner lives. 0:01:47.943,0:01:49.814 Her story made history because it was more 0:01:49.814,0:01:50.684 than just a story: 0:01:50.684,0:01:52.926 it was a complex literary portrait 0:01:52.926,0:01:54.777 of what it means to be human. 0:01:55.007,0:01:56.693 Although the hero of The Tale of Genji 0:01:56.693,0:01:58.462 is a man named "Prince Genji," 0:01:58.462,0:02:00.572 Shikibu filled her novel with multifaceted 0:02:00.572,0:02:02.686 female characters who provided a rare glimpse 0:02:02.686,0:02:05.775 into how it felt to be a woman in her world. 0:02:05.775,0:02:07.504 As Virginia Woolf later wrote, 0:02:07.504,0:02:08.955 when Murasaki set out to illuminate 0:02:08.955,0:02:10.614 the complicated life of the prince, 0:02:10.614,0:02:11.614 she naturally chose the medium 0:02:11.614,0:02:13.497 of other women's minds. 0:02:13.847,0:02:15.535 The Tale of Genji earned Murasaki 0:02:15.535,0:02:17.756 a permanent place in literary history. 0:02:17.756,0:02:19.565 It may also have helped her secure a position 0:02:19.565,0:02:20.766 at the imperial court, 0:02:20.766,0:02:22.343 where she became an attendant and occasional 0:02:22.343,0:02:24.226 tutor to the Empress Shoshi. 0:02:24.226,0:02:26.495 Murasaki became quite close with the Empress, 0:02:26.495,0:02:28.203 and even secretly taught her Chinese: 0:02:28.203,0:02:30.856 a language only men were supposed to learn. 0:02:30.856,0:02:31.940 Although it was a comfortable life, 0:02:31.940,0:02:33.515 Murasaki was often lonely, 0:02:33.515,0:02:35.205 and her literary fame made her the target 0:02:35.205,0:02:36.335 of court gossips, who called her 0:02:36.335,0:02:39.115 pretentious, arrogant, and unfriendly -- 0:02:39.115,0:02:40.697 complaints often heard about successful women 0:02:40.697,0:02:42.024 even today. 0:02:42.024,0:02:44.236 No one is sure exactly when Murasaki died, 0:02:44.236,0:02:45.816 but the legacy she left behind 0:02:45.816,0:02:47.350 changed Japanese literature forever, 0:02:47.350,0:02:49.505 and left a mark on the broader world of fiction 0:02:49.505,0:02:51.166 that can never be erased. 0:02:51.166,0:02:52.816 Throughout history, great novels 0:02:52.816,0:02:54.706 have traditionally been considered the domain 0:02:54.706,0:02:55.747 of male writers, 0:02:55.747,0:02:57.026 while tales of romance, 0:02:57.026,0:02:58.407 especially those written by women, 0:02:58.407,0:03:00.753 are often dismissed as frivolous or inferior. 0:03:00.753,0:03:03.635 But history itself tells a very different story. 0:03:03.635,0:03:05.807 Not only was the first novel a romance, 0:03:05.807,0:03:07.926 but it was one of the greatest literary masterpieces 0:03:07.926,0:03:08.936 in human history -- 0:03:08.936,0:03:10.926 and it was written by a woman. 0:03:10.926,0:03:12.385 Because she dared to imagine the world 0:03:12.385,0:03:14.526 in ways that no one had before, 0:03:14.526,0:03:16.755 we can still hear her voice echoing through time 0:03:16.755,0:03:18.346 more than a thousand years later, 0:03:18.346,0:03:20.305 daring us to imagine worlds of our own.