Scholars have long remarked on the frequency with which Japanese myths portrayed gods (kami) as old men or okina. Many of these “sacred elders†came to be featured in premodern theater; most prominently in Noh. In the closing decades of the twentieth-century; as the number of Japan’s senior citizens climbed steadily; the sacred elder of premodern myth became a subject of renewed interest and was seen by some as evidence that the elderly in Japan had once been accorded a level of respect unknown in recent times. In Buddhism and the Transformation of Old Age in Medieval Japan; Edward Drott charts the shifting sets of meanings ascribed to old age in medieval Japan; tracing the processes by which the aged body was transformed into a symbol of otherworldly power and the cultural; political; and religious circumstances that inspired its reimagination.Drott examines how the aged body was used to conceptualize forms of difference and to convey religious meanings in a variety of texts: official chronicles; literary works; Buddhist legends and didactic tales. In early Japan; old age was most commonly seen as a mark of negative distinction; one that represented the ugliness; barrenness; and pollution against which the imperial court sought to define itself. From the late-Heian period; however; certain Buddhist authors seized upon the aged body as a symbolic medium though which to challenge traditional dichotomies between center and margin; high and low; and purity and defilement; crafting narratives that associated aged saints and avatars with the cults; lineages; sacred sites; or religious practices these authors sought to promote. Contributing to a burgeoning literature on religion and the body; Buddhism and the Transformation of Old Age in Medieval Japan applies approaches developed in gender studies to “denaturalize†old age as a matter of representation; identity; and performance. By tracking the ideological uses of old age in premodern Japan; this work breaks new ground; revealing the role of religion in the construction of generational categories and the ways in which religious ideas and practices can serve not only to naturalize; but also challenge “common sense†about the body.
#2049952 in Books 2007-10-17 2007-10-17Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 8.97 x .69 x 6.49l; 1.01 #File Name: 0824831527316 pages
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