Memory and whaling: Commemorations of whale deaths in early modern Japan

IF 0.2 Q2 HISTORY
Michelle Damian
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Encounters with whales in early modern (seventeenth- to nineteenth-century) Japan were often memorialized through artwork such as scrolls or woodblock prints, permanent monuments such as steles or grave sites, and even in ritual practices such as annual Buddhist memorial ceremonies. Whaling groups used the commemorations of their interactions with whales to teach hunting techniques, display their prowess to outsiders, and atone for the Buddhist sin of killing another living creature. Non-whaling communities, which usually encountered whales through limited beachings or strandings, also found those situations worthy of commemoration. Their memorials celebrated the spectacle of the whale from the observer's viewpoint, or expressed gratitude for the financial windfall the dead whale brought to the community. This article examines how a community's relationship to whaling determined how it memorialized the encounter. These early modern memorial practices inform commemorations of whales even to the present day.
记忆与捕鲸:近代早期日本的鲸鱼死亡纪念活动
在近代早期(17 世纪至 19 世纪)的日本,人们经常通过卷轴或木刻版画等艺术作品、石碑或墓地等永久性纪念碑,甚至是每年的佛教纪念仪式等仪式来纪念与鲸鱼的相遇。捕鲸团体通过纪念他们与鲸鱼的互动来传授捕鲸技巧,向外人展示他们的实力,并弥补杀害其他生物的佛教罪过。非捕鲸族群通常通过有限的海滩或搁浅与鲸鱼相遇,他们也认为这些情况值得纪念。他们的纪念活动从观察者的角度歌颂鲸鱼的壮观场面,或对鲸鱼尸体给社区带来的意外之财表示感谢。本文探讨了一个社区与捕鲸业的关系如何决定了它如何纪念鲸鱼的遭遇。这些早期的现代纪念习俗甚至影响到了今天的鲸鱼纪念活动。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
33.30%
发文量
53
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