Authorizing the shogunate : ritual and material symbolism in the literary construction of warrior order /
Authorizing the Shogunate is a study of the symbolic construction of warrior order in the Heike monogatari corpus.
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Leiden ; Boston :
Brill,
2013.
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Colección: | Brill's Japanese studies library ;
v. 44. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Acknowledgements; Note on Conventions and Texts Used; Chapter One The Genpei jōsuiki and the Historical Narration of the Genpei War; The Late Heian World and the Genpei War; The Historical Rhetoric of the Genpei jōsuiki; Critical Approaches to Historicity in the Heike monogatari; The Scripting of Socio-political Order through the Semiotic Codes of Material and Ritual Culture; Variants and Textual Lines; The Genpei jōsuiki and the Dai Nihonshi; Chapter Two Fictions of Emergence: The Symbolic Regulation of Violence in the Battles of 1180.
- The Defiled East and the Unpropitious Beginning of the Genpei WarCleansing and Karmic Rebirth: The Sacralizing Potential of the Bathhouse; Dreaming the Body and Soothsaying the Face: The Legible Body in an Arbitrary World; The Fukuhara Edict, the Hōjōe, and the Legitimation of Violence; Tree Hollows, Boats, and other Fortune-Reviving Spaces: Yoritomo as the Latter-day Emperor Tenmu; The Battle of Fuji River and the Reimagining of the Borderlands; Punishing Traitors and Awarding Followers: Performing the Birth of a Law-Making Political Body; Conclusion.
- Chapter Three Gastro-Politics and the Shifting Geographyof Medieval Japan: Famine, Feasts, and the Court's Appointment of a Shogun in 1183The Material and the Cultural in Food; Gallows Humor: Domesticating the Political Challenge of Minamoto Yoshinaka; Uncourtly Dining Manners in the "Nekoma" Episode: Challenging the Court's Maintenance of Gastro-Political Order; Yoritomo's Feast in the Heike: Rewriting the Center-Periphery Dichotomy; Food and the Shifting Geography of Power: The 'Warrior Banquet' Trope in the Konjaku monogatarishū; Shogunal Feasts: Power and Pageantry in Medieval Japan.
- The Yōwa Famine in Historical RecordsConclusion; Chapter Four Converging and Diverging Doubles in 1185: Sword Replicas and the Locations of Martial Power; Sword Symbolism and Political Duality in the Medieval World; (Re- )Placing the Imperial Sword in the Medieval World; The "Hōken setsuwa" Passage: Atsuta Shrine and the Overlay of Sword Stories; Proleptic Visions of New Swords in the Genpei jōsuiki; The "Tsurugi no maki": Bloodline and the Fashioning of Shogunal Genealogy; Conclusion; Chapter Five The Cultural Shift from the Carriage to the Horse: Portending Historical Change.
- Horses amidst Carriages: Turmoil in the Construction of Symbolic AuthorityClashing Vehicles in the Streets of Kyoto: Marking Imperial Decline; The Horse that Sparked the Genpei War: Absorbing the Unpredictable Eruption of Warrior Violence; Ikezuki and Surusumi: Horse Racing (kurabeuma) and the Transformation of War into Sport; The Darkness of Horse Narratives in the Konjaku monogatarishū: Violence Rendered Distant; Equine Culture and the Logic of Power in Late Heian to Kamakura Japan; Chapter Six The Past in the Present: Troping Warrior Power in the Muromachi and Tokugawa Periods.