Gender in the Land of the Rising Sun (based on the Russian specialists’ researches on Japan). Part 1

O. Meleshchenko
{"title":"Gender in the Land of the Rising Sun (based on the Russian specialists’ researches on Japan). Part 1","authors":"O. Meleshchenko","doi":"10.17721/2522-1272.2019.74.11","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The gender situation in the cosmogonic myths of the peoples of Japan is considered on the example of mythopoetry of the Ryukyu region, as well as the influence of these myths on the gender balance of the old Ryukyu societies both before Christ era and from its beginning up to the 19th century.\n\nThe researcher E. Baksheev, based on the achievements of N. Nevsky – the founder of the Russian School of Japanese Studies, as well as his colleague A. Sadokova, reconstructed the role of a woman in the ancient Japanese society on the example of mythopoetry of the Ryukyu region. The chronicles «Records of Omorho Songs» (1532 – 1623), «Records about the path of the Ryukyu gods» (1603 – 1606) by the Japanese monk Taytyu: Rio: teya, «The Mirror of the Generations of Thu: Dzan – the Kingdom of the Ryukyu» (1650), «The Genealogy of Thu: Dzan» (1697 – 1701,\n1874), «The Rite of the High Priestess» (1875) were the sources of the research.\n\nIn the Japanese society, before the Meiji Revolution, at all social levels of its organization, along with a man who had socio-political and economic power – from the head of the house to the head of the rural community and, further, to the regional ruler and the king – there was a priestess\n(a relative and mainly a sister). Her functions were to rely on the authority of the leader spiritually and ritually, relying on the deities’ «will». The kings of Ryukyu were forced to rely on mediation of the priestesses so that siji (shōjo magic power) would come from the Other (parallel) light to protect the throne and the prosperity of the state in this light. In those old times, the status of such a priestess was even higher than that of a male ruler who ruled on her behalf. The Russian specialists on Japan define such a structure of power as diarchy («dual power»), and the system of government as theocratic. In the terminology of Japanese researchers, the theocratic system of government is called as the policy of «unity of worship and governance».\n\nIn the XIII – XIV centuries the local and regional rulers were put under the control of the King Ryukyu. The priestesses also lost their independence and had to obey the High Priestess from the royal family. A single secular and religious power was divided into the highest (court) and lower (local) levels.\n\nA special feature of the Ryukyu mythology is the late records of the texts with preservation of many archaic motifs and their «applied», frankly social and political biased character. One of the main tasks of such myths was consecration of the status of the ruling elite and the magical assertion of its high status to support the current social hierarchy. «The Records of Omoro songs» (a poetic anthology in 22 volumes, which includes 1,553 old ritual priestly chants), as well as «The Records about the path of the Ryukyu gods» were not completed as in the early 17th\ncentury the Kingdom of Ryukyu became the target of aggression from the Japanese clan Satsuma and was under its indirect control.\n\nThe following chronicles were created under different ideological supervision, which, however, did not change their essence.\n\nAlso in the period of the 9th – 14th centuries, as an exception, the rare images of a female warrior appeared, and then disappeared in the 16th – 19th centuries before the Meiji Revolution, being replaced massively by the disenfranchised Japanese women – the wives of samurai, peasants, artisans and merchants.\n\nAfter the Meiji revolution in 1879, the government of Japan established the Okinawa prefecture.","PeriodicalId":328436,"journal":{"name":"Scientific notes of the Institute of Journalism","volume":"48 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1900-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Scientific notes of the Institute of Journalism","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.17721/2522-1272.2019.74.11","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

The gender situation in the cosmogonic myths of the peoples of Japan is considered on the example of mythopoetry of the Ryukyu region, as well as the influence of these myths on the gender balance of the old Ryukyu societies both before Christ era and from its beginning up to the 19th century. The researcher E. Baksheev, based on the achievements of N. Nevsky – the founder of the Russian School of Japanese Studies, as well as his colleague A. Sadokova, reconstructed the role of a woman in the ancient Japanese society on the example of mythopoetry of the Ryukyu region. The chronicles «Records of Omorho Songs» (1532 – 1623), «Records about the path of the Ryukyu gods» (1603 – 1606) by the Japanese monk Taytyu: Rio: teya, «The Mirror of the Generations of Thu: Dzan – the Kingdom of the Ryukyu» (1650), «The Genealogy of Thu: Dzan» (1697 – 1701, 1874), «The Rite of the High Priestess» (1875) were the sources of the research. In the Japanese society, before the Meiji Revolution, at all social levels of its organization, along with a man who had socio-political and economic power – from the head of the house to the head of the rural community and, further, to the regional ruler and the king – there was a priestess (a relative and mainly a sister). Her functions were to rely on the authority of the leader spiritually and ritually, relying on the deities’ «will». The kings of Ryukyu were forced to rely on mediation of the priestesses so that siji (shōjo magic power) would come from the Other (parallel) light to protect the throne and the prosperity of the state in this light. In those old times, the status of such a priestess was even higher than that of a male ruler who ruled on her behalf. The Russian specialists on Japan define such a structure of power as diarchy («dual power»), and the system of government as theocratic. In the terminology of Japanese researchers, the theocratic system of government is called as the policy of «unity of worship and governance». In the XIII – XIV centuries the local and regional rulers were put under the control of the King Ryukyu. The priestesses also lost their independence and had to obey the High Priestess from the royal family. A single secular and religious power was divided into the highest (court) and lower (local) levels. A special feature of the Ryukyu mythology is the late records of the texts with preservation of many archaic motifs and their «applied», frankly social and political biased character. One of the main tasks of such myths was consecration of the status of the ruling elite and the magical assertion of its high status to support the current social hierarchy. «The Records of Omoro songs» (a poetic anthology in 22 volumes, which includes 1,553 old ritual priestly chants), as well as «The Records about the path of the Ryukyu gods» were not completed as in the early 17th century the Kingdom of Ryukyu became the target of aggression from the Japanese clan Satsuma and was under its indirect control. The following chronicles were created under different ideological supervision, which, however, did not change their essence. Also in the period of the 9th – 14th centuries, as an exception, the rare images of a female warrior appeared, and then disappeared in the 16th – 19th centuries before the Meiji Revolution, being replaced massively by the disenfranchised Japanese women – the wives of samurai, peasants, artisans and merchants. After the Meiji revolution in 1879, the government of Japan established the Okinawa prefecture.
《旭日之国的性别》(根据俄罗斯专家对日本的研究)。第1部分
本文以琉球地区的神话诗歌为例,考察了日本各民族宇宙形成神话中的性别状况,以及这些神话在基督时代之前及其开始至19世纪期间对琉球旧社会性别平衡的影响。研究者E. Baksheev以俄罗斯日本研究学派创始人N. Nevsky及其同事a . Sadokova的成就为基础,以琉球地区神话诗歌为例,重构了古代日本社会中女性的角色。编年史“Omorho歌曲记录”(1532年至1623年),“记录关于琉球神的路径”(1603年至1606年),由日本和尚Taytyu: b里约热内卢:teya,“世代的镜子的Thu:赞-琉球王国”(1650年),“Thu:赞的家谱”(1697年至1701年,1874年),“仪式的大祭司”(1875年)是研究的来源。在日本社会,在明治革命之前,在其组织的所有社会阶层中,伴随着一个拥有社会政治和经济权力的人——从一家之主到农村社区之主,再到地区统治者和国王——都有一个女祭司(一个亲戚,主要是妹妹)。她的职能是在精神上和仪式上依靠领袖的权威,依靠神灵的“意志”。琉球的国王们被迫依靠女祭司的调解,这样siji (shōjo魔法力量)就会从他者(平行)的光中来保护王位和国家的繁荣。在那个古老的时代,女祭司的地位甚至高于代表她统治的男性统治者。俄罗斯的日本问题专家将这种权力结构定义为君主政体(“双重权力”),将政府体系定义为神权政体。在日本研究者的术语中,神权政体被称为“敬治合一”的政策。在十三至十四世纪,地方和地区的统治者被置于琉球国王的控制之下。女祭司也失去了独立性,不得不服从王室的女祭司。单一的世俗和宗教权力被分为最高(法院)和较低(地方)两级。琉球神话的一个特点是保存了许多古代主题的文本的晚期记录及其“应用”,坦率地说,社会和政治偏见的特征。这些神话的主要任务之一是将统治精英的地位神圣化,并神奇地断言其高地位以支持当前的社会等级制度。《大摩罗歌录》(共22卷,包含1553首古老的祭祀圣歌)和《琉球诸神之路录》都没有完成,因为琉球王国在17世纪初成为日本萨摩族侵略的目标,并处于其间接控制之下。之后的编年史是在不同的思想监督下创作的,但其本质并没有改变。同样是在9 - 14世纪,作为一个例外,女性战士的罕见形象出现了,然后在明治革命前的16 - 19世纪消失了,取而代之的是大量被剥夺公民权的日本女性——武士、农民、工匠和商人的妻子。1879年明治维新后,日本政府设立了冲绳县。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
求助全文
约1分钟内获得全文 求助全文
来源期刊
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
×
引用
GB/T 7714-2015
复制
MLA
复制
APA
复制
导出至
BibTeX EndNote RefMan NoteFirst NoteExpress
×
提示
您的信息不完整,为了账户安全,请先补充。
现在去补充
×
提示
您因"违规操作"
具体请查看互助需知
我知道了
×
提示
确定
请完成安全验证×
copy
已复制链接
快去分享给好友吧!
我知道了
右上角分享
点击右上角分享
0
联系我们:info@booksci.cn Book学术提供免费学术资源搜索服务,方便国内外学者检索中英文文献。致力于提供最便捷和优质的服务体验。 Copyright © 2023 布克学术 All rights reserved.
京ICP备2023020795号-1
ghs 京公网安备 11010802042870号
Book学术文献互助
Book学术文献互助群
群 号:481959085
Book学术官方微信