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E-raamat: From Sovereign to Symbol: An Age of Ritual Determinism in Fourteenth Century Japan [Oxford Scholarship Online e-raamatud]

(Associate Professor of History and Asian Studies, Bowdoin College)
  • Formaat: 256 pages, 10 b&w; 3 maps
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-Jan-2012
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-13: 9780199778102
  • Oxford Scholarship Online e-raamatud
  • Raamatu hind pole hetkel teada
  • Formaat: 256 pages, 10 b&w; 3 maps
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-Jan-2012
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-13: 9780199778102
Fourteenth-century Japan witnessed a fundamental political and intellectual conflict about the nature of power and society, a conflict that was expressed through the rituals and institutions of two rival courts. Rather than understanding the collapse of Japan's first warrior government (the Kamakura bakufu) and the onset of a chaotic period of civil war as the manipulation of rival courts by powerful warrior factions, this study argues that the crucial ideological and intellectual conflict of the fourteenth century was between the conservative forces of ritual precedent and the ritual determinists steeped in Shingon Buddhism. Members of the monastic nobility who came to dominate the court used the language of Buddhist ritual, including incantations (mantras), gestures (mudras), and "cosmograms" (mandalas projected onto the geography of Japan) to uphold their bids for power. Sacred places that were ritual centers became the targets of military capture precisely because they were ritual centers. Ritual was not simply symbolic; rather, ritual became the orchestration, or actual dynamic, of power in itself. This study undermines the conventional wisdom that Zen ideals linked to the samurai were responsible for the manner in which power was conceptualized in medieval Japan, and instead argues that Shingon ritual specialists prolonged the conflict and enforced the new notion that loyal service trumped the merit of those who simply requested compensation for their acts. Ultimately, Shingon mimetic ideals enhanced warrior power and enabled Shogun Ashikaga Yoshimitsu, rather than the reigning emperor, to assert sovereign authority in Japan.
Prologue 3(11)
Reconstructing Ritual Actions through Shingon Sources
6(3)
The Limitations of the Taiheiki, Japan's Fourteenth-Century Epic
9(4)
The Later Reputations of Chikafusa and Kenshun
13(1)
Introduction 14(173)
The Transformation of Court Ritual
14(4)
The Masters of Precedent
18(3)
The Significance of the Court in Medieval Japan
21(8)
Overview
29(3)
1 The Rise of the Administrative Nobility
32(20)
Proprietary Provinces
35(1)
Talent, Ambition and the Competition of Ideas
36(2)
Hino Toshimitsu
38(2)
Disputed Succession to the Throne
40(2)
Toshimitsu's Influence in the Jimyo'in Court
42(2)
Eclipse
44(4)
Hino Sukena and the Ephemeral Revival of Jimyo'in Fortunes
48(4)
2 Kitabatake Chikafusa and the Unveiling of Court Secrets
52(25)
The Early Career of Kitabatake Chikafusa
53(3)
"The Precedent of the Future" and Go-Daigo's Assault on Secrecy
56(1)
Court Commanders
57(2)
Kitabatake Akiie
57(2)
Regalia as the Basis for Southern Court Legitimacy
59(5)
A Brief History of the Regalia
60(4)
The Sacred Geography of the Southern Court
64(5)
Southern Court Territory as a "Land of the Gods"
66(3)
Eastern Endeavors and Failures
69(5)
Principles and Prophecy
72(2)
Sustaining the Struggling Southern Court
74(3)
3 The Master of Ritual
77(40)
The Role of Protector Monks (Gojiso)
79(4)
Charismatic Monks (Geza)
80(3)
The Increasing Prominence of Shingon Buddhism
83(3)
Go-Uda's Attempt to Unify Shingon Thought
84(2)
The Early Career of Sanbo'in Kenshun
86(3)
Monkan and the Religious Policies of Go-Daigo's Regime
89(4)
A New Religious and Political Order
93(11)
The Establishment of the Ashikaga Bakufu
93(3)
Creating a Sanbo'in Monzeki
96(2)
The Ritual Master
98(2)
Cultic Sites in the Capital
100(4)
Access and Influence
104(3)
Intermediary for Court and Bakufu
105(2)
Asserting Ritual Power over the Southern Courts Cosmogram
107(1)
Coordinating Rival Sects
108(2)
Demonstrating Ritual Determinism: The Futama Kannon
110(2)
The 1348 Offensive and Ritual Warring
112(2)
Displacing the Sovereign
114(3)
4 The Destruction of Precedent
117(13)
The Fracturing Ashikaga Order
118(4)
Competing Notions of Court Legitimacy
122(2)
Chikafusa's Gambit
124(2)
The Rupture
126(2)
Death and Legacy
128(2)
5 Creating Court and Sovereign
130(19)
Eclipse: The Warrior Gojiso
130(5)
Opportunistic Rivals
132(1)
Takaujis Restoration
133(2)
The New Northern Court
135(6)
An Unprecedented Enthronement
136(2)
Demanding Devotion and Enforcing Service
138(2)
Kenshuns Accumulation of Lands and Offices
140(1)
The Decentering of the Capital
141(5)
Ritual Mastery and Shingon Secrecy
145(1)
"His Glory Knows No Bounds"
146(3)
6 The End of the Past
149(22)
The Succession
150(3)
The Personalization of State Rituals
153(2)
Sanbo'in Regional Influence
155(5)
Proprietary Provinces
155(2)
Gaining Control of Contested Lands
157(3)
Rebuilding and Reinventing the Center
160(6)
The Intermediary (Baikai)
162(2)
Contentious Relations with Religious Institutions
164(2)
The 1375 Ceremony of Great Thanksgiving
166(3)
The Consequences of Shedding Precedent
167(2)
The Loss of Secrets
169(2)
7 The Ashikaga Emperor
171(16)
Establishing a Sovereign Presence
172(3)
Yoshimitsu's Promotions and Ritual Freedom
173(2)
The Enablers
175(2)
Ritual Assertions of Sovereignty
177(6)
Pilgrimages and Processions
180(1)
The Sovereign Presence
181(2)
A New Geography of Capital
183(2)
Death and Legacy
185(2)
Epilogue: The Unraveling 187(6)
Glossary 193(8)
Bibliography 201(18)
Index 219
Associate Professor of History and Asian Studies at Bowdoin College