The British Haiku Society


The British Haiku Society was formed in 1990 to promote haiku and to teach and publish Haiku in English. Its membership of approximately 400 includes members from 27 countries.

Activities

The British Haiku Society holds events and The British Haiku Society Awards including The Museum of Haiku Literature Awards and The Haibungaku Awards. From the 1990s until 2004 the Society also offered a Sasakawa Prize.
In 1992 The British Haiku Society published The Haiku Hundred, an anthology of haiku in English to bring haiku to the attention of UK readers.
The first president of the BHS was James Kirkup, followed by David Cobb, Martin Lucas, Annie Bachini, President vacant, Graham High, Kate B Hall, Colin Blundell, David Bingham, Roger Noons, and Iliyana Stoyanova.
Several haiku groups operate under the auspices of The British Haiku Society including The London Haiku Group, Greenwood Haiku Group, Leaves to a Tree Haiku Group, Yorkshire-Lancashire Group, The Oxford Haiku Group, Edinburgh Haiku Circle, Essex Haiku Group, and Cambridge Haiku Group.

Publications

Journal

The journal of The British Haiku Society is Blithe Spirit, which is a salute to Reginald Horace Blyth and to poetry via Percy Bysshe Shelley’s poem To a Skylark with its opening line “Hail to thee, blithe spirit!”. Blithe Spirit publishes volumes of four issues a year featuring haiku and related forms such as tanka, haibun, book reviews, and essays. The journal is currently edited by Iliyana Stoyanova.. Since 1990, the previous editors have been David Cobb, Richard Goring, Colin Blundell, Jackie Hardy, Caroline Gourlay, Annie Bachini, Graham High, Mark Rutter, David Bingham, David Serjeant, Shrikaanth Krishnamurti and Caroline Skanne.
Haiku appearing in Blithe Spirit regularly feature in those recognised as being among the top 100 best haiku by European haijan. Contributors to Blithe Spirit have included the late Raymond Roseliep, American haiku poet and publisher Jim Kacian, American haiku poets Cor van den Heuvel and and Lee Gurga, Canadian haiku poet George Swede and British haiku poet Roger Watson. The BHS also produce a newsletter The Brief currently edited by Maya Daneva.
  • The British Haiku Society ''Blithe Spirit: Journal of the British Haiku Society''

Books

  • Kirkup J, Cobb D, Mortimer P The Haiku Hundred Iron Press, Manchester
  • Cobb D The Genius of Haiku: Readings from R H Blyth on Poetry, Life, and Zen The British Haiku Society,
  • Cobb D, Lucas M The Iron Book of British Haiku Iron Press, Manchester
  • Lucas M Stepping Stones: A Way Into haiku The British Haiku Society,
  • Graham High Barbed Wire Blossoms: The Museum of Haiku Literature Award Anthology 1992-2011 The British Haiku Society
  • Hugh G A Silver Tapestry: The Best of 25 Years of Critical Writing from The British Haiku Society The British Haiku Society,
  • Stoyanova I Ekphrasis: The British Haiku Society Members' Anthology 2017 The British Haiku Society,
  • Shimield A wild: the british haiku society anthology 2018 The British Haiku Society,
  • Bingham D, Stoyanova I Where silence becomes song: International Haiku Conference Anthology The British Haiku Society,
  • Blundell C, Stoyanova I, Bingham D Harmony Within Diversity: A collection of papers delivered at the International Haiku Conference in St Albans, UK 31 May - 2 June 2019 The British Haiku Society,
  • Hall KB Root: The British Haiku Society Members' Anthology 2019 The British Haiku Society,
  • Stoyanova I Temple The British Haiku Society
  • Storr I, van Noort R, Aubrey K, Smith V Coastal Visions The British Haiku Society
  • Marcoff AA In Sun, Snow & Rain: Tanka From a World of Song The British Haiku Society
  • Peat A Humour The British Haiku Society
  • Marcoff AA, Bingham D, Stoyanova I, Hristov V Shining Wind/Сияен вятър The British Haiku Society
  • Somerville N Hope The British Haiku Society

Recognition

The British Haiku Society is listed in the International Who's Who in Poetry. The role of the BHS in the development of haiku in the UK has been recognised by the International Academic Forum who sponsor the annual IAFOR Vladimir Devidé Haiku Award. The British Haiku Society is listed in The Haiku Foundation and Haikupedia.

The British Haiku Society in the media

In 2009, the president of the society complained about the quality of haiku being submitted to a haiku string competition where the winning entries, which were flashed on a screen at London King's Cross railway station, were judged by Yoko Ono and Jackie Kay.
The British Haiku Society was featured in a BBC Four programme on Utopia in August 2017. In May 2019, the British Haiku Society held an International Haiku Conference in St Albans, UK.