Michelle 
Damian: Marine Landscapes of the Inland Sea Region

Marine Landscapes of the Inland Sea Region

by Michelle Damian
Talk given at the Dec. 8-9, 2010 Conference

This talk will introduce proposed research for my Ph.D. dissertation. Though Japan is an archipelago, the contributions and identities of its maritime communities have been marginalized. More effort has been expended on agrarian and urban settlements. My project will examine island and coastal communities of the Seto Inland Sea to understand the developing maritime cultural landscape during the Muromachi era (1336–1573). Doing so will reveal not only a new economic dynamic, by shifting the focus from solely a rice-based economy to assess the fiscal contributions of marine-based communities. It will also clarify the prominence of the sea itself in daily life. Japan’s coastline spans thousands of miles. The effects of such a geographic environment manifest themselves in the determination of settlement patterns, the creation of maritime infrastructure, and the development of ritual ways of interacting with the sea. I intend to reposition the sea at the heart of Muromachi Japan, to reveal those previously ignored cultural, economic, and technological contributions of littoral communities.

Dina Grib: Kishōmon—written pledges—in the Kamakura Period (1185-1333)

Kishōmon—written pledges—in the Kamakura Period (1185-1333)

by Dina Grib
Talk given at the Dec. 8-9, 2010 Conference

The theme of my research is written pledges, kishōmon, in the Kamakura Period. In my presentation today I would like to briefly introduce the special features of this type of document, its history, and the main types of medieval kishōmon. I also want to share my thoughts concerning the contents of the so-called “punishment section” in these pledges.

Kishōmon as a document type has ancient roots, with the deity being both the witness and recipient of the pledge. The typical kishōmon consists of two parts. It begins with a description of the terms of the pledge, called a "preface" (zensho). That is followed by what is called either the "sacred pledge" (shinmon) or "punishment article" (batsubun), which lists the Shinto and Buddhist deities in which the pledging party or parties have faith. It also states that if the pledge is broken, the violating party will not object to being punished by the deities. A kishōmon is therefore a testament to the authority of the deities.

As a document type, the kishōmon is supposed to have appeared in the early 12th century, and it is thought to have been utilized throughout the Kamakura, Muromachi, and Edo shogunates, up to the later nineteenth century. From the 13th century onward, kishōmon were written on the back surface of a paper "talisman" stamped with the "Goō Jewel Seal" (Goō hōin) as an expression of the firm will of the pledging parties. In the late medieval period, blood-stamped written oaths of allegiance became a common practice—after writing a pledge, warriors signed and sealed it with their blood.

Of the several kinds of kishōmon in medieval Japan, the best known are those made by warriors, bushi, who swore loyalty to their lord. But kishōmon were also composed by officials, especially provincial governors who swore to be honest and obey laws and Buddhist restrictions while fulfilling their duties. Buddhist monks also wrote kishōmon in order to swear their obedience to religious restrictions and temple rules. And peasants composed kishōmon when they asked for tribute reduction, to prove that they were not lying when they said that the harvest had been destroyed by fire or insects. Finally those involved in a trial by ordeal—either the defendant or the suitor—wrote kishōmon to prove their innocence and uprightness.

One of the most interesting features of Japanese written oaths is their so-called "punishment section." It might say, for instance, “Should I break this pledge, I am ready to be punished by all the Japanese gods, mighty and lesser, including Fuji, Hakusan, Tenman Tenjin, Hachiman Bosatsu, and Atago.” The list of deity names differs from region to region, and it may consist of as many as a hundred names. Often the batsubun not only states the readiness of the initiator of the pledge to be punished; it also lists examples of “heavenly punishment,” such as “falling into the pits of hell,” being stricken with Hansen`s disease (Mycobacterium leprae), falling into poverty, never attaining enlightenment, loosing the respect of society,” and so on. Such pledges give us good opportunities to investigate the worldviews and cosmologies of medieval people.

Presentation PDF (in Japanese)

Kanazawa Noriko: China in the Work of Sugawara Takasue’s Daughter

China in the Work of Sugawara Takasue’s Daughter

by KANAZAWA Noriko
Talk given at the Dec. 8-9, 2010 Conference

In Go-Reizei Tennō’s era (AD 1050s), Sugawara Takasue’s daughter wrote Hamamatsu Chūnagon monogatari. Although it is categorized as a love story like Genji monogatari, it is actually a story that is quite different from that in the Genji.

The hero is a son of a prince. His father died and the soul transmigrated to China, Morokoshi (唐土), where he became a royal prince. The hero decided to see his father again and went to Morokoshi. There he met the queen who was the prince’s mother, and he fell in love with her. But then he had to return to Kyoto in Japan because his mother was waiting for him there. Nonetheless he never forgot the queen, and the story suggests that the queen would someday transmigrate to Japan to meet the hero again because she loved him deeply. It is meaningful for the story that she lived in the land of China, but I think that the Morokoshi of Hamamatsu Chūnagon monogatari is actually an imaginary place.

Later Fujiwara Teika wrote a similar monogatari entitled Matsura no Miya monogatari (松浦宮物語)”) because he was so impressed with the earlier story. Moreover Mumyōzōshi (無名草子), an essay of literary criticism from Kamakura (1185-1333) times, also contains praise for Hamamatsu Chūnagon monogatari. But contemporary scholarship does not necessarily agree. Some scholars view Hamamatsu Chūnagon monogatari as a poor imitation of Genji monogatari, and they point out too that Sugawara Takasue’s daughter knew little of China and its literature while the author of Genji monogatari had knowledge of both.

I think that such views miss the point. The actual land of China was not important for the monogatari. I would argue that the author of Hamamatsu Chūnagon monogatari had much knowledge of the poetry in Chinese that Japanese poets had composed. That would help us to understand that the monogatari was never meant to be an imitation of Genji monogatari. Sugawara Takasue’s daughter was proud of her Sugawara blood because her family had played an important role in the study of the Chinese classics during the Heian epoch. Her monogatari proved that she was indeed a daughter of the Sugawara.

Handout PDF (in Japanese)

Nobuko Toyosawa: Kaibara Ekiken and the Fudoki: Traveling the Native Land

Kaibara Ekiken and the Fudoki: Traveling the Native Land

by Nobuko Toyosawa
Talk given at the Dec. 8-9, 2010 Conference
 

This presentation focuses on the scholar and traveler Kaibara Ekiken (1630-1714), who developed a new mode of writing about space and topography, movement across the landscape, and the relationship of places and spaces in the present to moments in the past. I will argue here that Ekiken’s spatial writings reflect his attempt to quantify space while investigating topographic features of the locale, and that his primary concern was to represent Japan in the tradition of regional gazetteer (fudoki) writing rather than introducing famous places (meisho; nadokoro). By writing about the locale based on a variety of official historical texts, Ekiken tapped into a sense of historical continuity rooted in the ancient past while visualizing the spatiality of the realm where he lived. 

Janet R. Goodwin: Learning from Shōen: The Ōbe Estate Project

Learning from Shōen: The Ōbe Estate Project

by Janet R. Goodwin
Talk given at the Dec. 8-9, 2010 Conference

Using documents dated from the mid-twelfth through the sixteenth centuries, a group of scholars based at USC in the Project for Premodern Japan Studies is examining the socioeconomic and political history of Ōbe Estate (Ōbe no shō), an agricultural estate established in Harima Province in the late Heian Period as a holding of the great Nara monastery, Tōdaiji. This talk presents an overview of findings to date concerning some of those documents and from archaeological investigations, focusing on how a case study of an individual estate can contribute to a greater understanding of broader historical currents during the Heian and Kamakura periods. 

Suzuki Hiroyuki: Archery Rituals in Classical Japan

Archery Rituals in Classical Japan

by SUZUKI Hiroyuki
Talk given at the Dec. 8-9, 2010 Conference

In this paper I will discuss archery rituals, of which there were two types in classical Japan: standing archery and mounted archery. My focus will be on standing archery, as practiced during three annual court events: the Jarai (1/17), the Noriyumi (1/18) , and the Iba hajime (10/5). In earlier research, standing archery has been studied as one part of these events, especially in the work of Kurabayashi Masaji. In his research, Kurabayashi introduced the topic of royal banquets in which the monarch made his relationship with his subordinates visible through New Year’s events. Obinata Katsumi argued that standing archery was particularly important in the structure of the ritsuryô polity, and he has discussed the various events where it occurred as well as its diachronic development in the larger context of comparisons with other East Asian realms. Taking this earlier work as my base, I will look at standing archery from a different perspective. On New Year’s Day in 825, the monarch Junna Tennō (r. 823-33) called the Jarai event “a particularly important ceremony for the realm.” While this event is described in ritual handbooks, we can also see how courtiers thought about it by considering entries from the journals wherein they wrote about it. I will discuss some of those today.

Paper PDF (in Japanese)

Makino Atsushi: Dharma-king Go-Shirakawa’s Kingship in the Heike monogatari

Dharma-king Go-Shirakawa’s Kingship in the Heike monogatari

by MAKINO Atsushi
Talk given at the Dec. 8-9, 2010 Conference

Go-Shirakawa does not play a leading role in the Tale of Heike (Heike monogatari) corpus, but he is the only personality that appears throughout the entire story. He plays a leading role behind the scenes. So I want to consider, how does the Heike present Go-Shirakawa’s kingship? In this lecture I will focus on the Engyō-bon 延慶本 manuscript of the Heike, in which Go-Shirakawa appears more frequently than in other versions, such as the Kakuchi-bon version which is more frequently read.

In the Engyō-bon it is in the chapter entitled “The Kanjō of Go-Shirakawa” (法皇御灌頂事) wherein Go-shirakawa is drawn in the finest detail. The kanjō is a ceremony marking the completion of esoteric Buddhist instruction. Go-Shirakawa is seen therein devoting himself to Buddhist doctrine and ascetic practices, thereby becoming the ideal Dharma-king, or King of the Buddhist Law.

On the other hand, the Engyō-bon draws the figure of Go-Shirakawa in ways that can not be considered those of an ideal ruler, as in its chapters on the Shishinotani plot and the Hōjūji battle(鹿谷事件; 法住寺合戦). In the former, Go-Shirakawa's subjects were arrested by the Heike army; and in the latter, we see a fight between Go-Shirakawa and Minamoto Yoshinaka. In these scenes Go-Shirakawa is also seen enjoying performances of comic acts called sarugaku (猿楽), or monkey music,and his abnormal devotion to such entertainment causes a serious affair.

So how were Buddhist ascetic practices and fondness for monkey music related? The Heike compiler seems to praise Go-Shirakawa on the one hand and blame him on the other. My view is that praise and blame existed simultaneously, since both related to aspects of Go-Shirakawa’s personality and his kingship elicited both. So what kind of kingship was it? When we can articulate the answer to that question, we will know that the Heike compiler understood Go-Shirakawa’s kingship well.

Presentation PDF

Joan R. Piggott: Japanese History Beyond National History

Japanese History Beyond National History

by Joan R. Piggott
Talk given at the Dec. 8-9, 2010 Conference

As a teacher and researcher of Japan’s history outside Japanese borders, I have to think about why what I study and teach matters to students and historians who are not specialists in Japanese or even East Asian history. My answer is that there are themes in Japan’s history that offer particularly useful insights for thinking about the history of other places. In this talk I will talk about some of the ways I frame my own work in regional and world historical perspectives, in the process of taking Japan’s history beyond national history.

Kristina Buhrman: The Possibility of a History of Science for the Heian Insei Era

The Possibility of a History of Science for the Heian Insei Era

by Kristina Buhrman
Talk given at the Dec. 8-9, 2010 Conference

There has not been much in the way of a history of science in Japan for the period between the Heian Regency and the Edo periods. The late Heian Insei era in particular is depicted as a period of stagnation and decline as far as investigations of the natural world are concerned. However, the standard histories of Japanese science are based on a comparison with modern science, which leads to a problem of anachronism. Developments in the history of European science since the 1970s have questioned many of the founding assumptions of the earlier history of science for the modern and medieval periods. This paper introduces some of these developments, particularly related to credibility and scientific change, and it explores what new models might contribute to Japanese intellectual and cultural history. Although the question of whether Japanese astrology should be considered a science in its time remains debatable, the use of techniques from the history of science opens a fruitful way to trace some of the consequences of client-patron relationships on late Heian culture.

Takase Katsumori: Spatial Diversity and Temporal Changes in Plant Use in Sagami Province— Classical Japan, An Archaeological Approach

Spatial Diversity and Temporal Changes in Plant Use in Sagami Province—
Classical Japan, An Archaeological Approach

by TAKASE Katsunori
Conference presentation given Dec. 8-9, 2010

Agriculture, one of the most important economic foundations for classical Japan, was practiced in two forms: paddy cultivation and dry field cultivation. I post that the balance between them should have a close relationship with land use in each region. But it is difficult to reconstruct the micro-scale spatial diversity of farming due to the paucity of documents. Nevertheless, wooden tablets and pictorial diagrams have begun to play an important role in studying this problem. In this paper I will demonstrate that archaeological evidence—specifically analysis of plant remains and site locations in Sagami province—provides good clues to the regional character of farming in classical Japan. 

Presentation PDF
Paper (in English) PDF

Sasaki Ken'ichi: Keyhole-shaped Tombs and Political Structure in Fifth-century Japan

Keyhole-shaped Tombs and Political Structure in Fifth-century Japan

by SASAKI Ken’ichi
Conference talk given December 8, 2010

In this paper I discuss the political structure of the central polity and its relationship with local polities in the fifth century, from the standpoint of keyhole-shaped tombs. By the fifth century the political structure of the central polity grew to be more complex to the extent that it had a rudimentary form of bureaucracy, which was reflected in mortuary patterns, most notably the presence of baicho 陪冢, small square and circular tombs that surrounded giant keyhole-shaped tombs. In addition to the presence of baicho and the giant size of the keyhole-shaped tombs, the central polity located in Kawachi and Yamato distinguished itself from other local polities by various means, such as the adoption of special stone coffins and a monopoly over iron armor.  However it seems that the power of the central polity was not strong enough to control all local polities, and the central polity gave out extra iron armor to “lure” local polities into its orbit.

PDF of Sasaki Ken'ichi's paper

Conference: Talks from the 2009 USC-Meiji Exchange

  • December 8, 2009

    Prof. Atsushi Makino, Meiji University
    Lecture in conjunction with meeting of the Meiji University-USC exchange
    Toward a New Understanding of the Tale of Heike--Buddhism and Buddhist Preaching
    10:00 AM-12:00PM

  • December 8, 2009

    Maori Takahashi, Meiji University
    Lecture in conjunction with meeting of the Meiji University-USC exchange
    Rule by the Retired Monarch in the Tale of Genji--Fact and Fiction
    2:30-4:30 PM

  • December 7, 2009

    Prof. Ken'ichi Sasaki, Meiji University
    Lecture in conjunction with meeting of the Meiji University-USC exchange
    Political Structures of the Early Kofun Period--Archeological Perspectives from the Keyhold Tombs, ca. 250-400 C.E.
    11:00 AM-12:00 PM

  • December 7, 2009

    Prof. Katsunori Takase, Meiji University
    Lecture in conjunction with meeting of the Meiji University-USC exchange
    Prehistoric and Protohistoric Plant Use in the Japanese Archipelago
    9:30-10:30 AM