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The Cultic World of the Blind Monks: Benzaiten, Jūzenji, and Shukujin
作者 Faure, Bernard
出處題名 Journal of Religion in Japan
卷期v.2 n.2-3
出版日期2013
頁次171 - 194
出版者Brill
出版者網址 http://www.brill.com/
出版地Leiden, the Netherlands [萊登, 荷蘭]
資料類型期刊論文=Journal Article
使用語言英文=English
關鍵詞Jūzenji; biwa hōshi; Konparu Zenchiku; blind monks (mōsō); Shukujin; Benzaiten
摘要This paper examines the complex institutional and symbolic network that developed during the medieval period, bringing together people, places, institutions, myths, legends, rituals, and deities. It focuses on the relationships between the goddess of musical arts and eloquence Benzaiten, the Hie Shrine deity Jūzenji, and itinerant performers such as the blind monks (mōsō) and the biwa hōshi, who were instrumental in bringing together traditional Buddhist teachings and the performing arts (geinō). The paper argues that these relationships formed part of a broader semantic and symbolic field, at the center of which was the Protean figure of the shukujin (whose name can mean “astral god” and “god of destiny,” but also “god of the shuku”—outcasts groups and settlements). It shows how the latter was eventually identified by the Nō playwright Konparu Zenchiku (1405-1468), in his seminal work Meishukushū, with the figure of Okina, the divine old man that is widely regarded as the symbol of Nō theater. With the slow decline of the blind monks and the growing aestheticism of Nō, however, the vital connection between esoteric Buddhism, local religious traditions, and the performing arts eventually unraveled.
ISSN22118330 (P); 22118349 (E)
DOI10.1163/22118349-12341254
點閱次數236
建檔日期2017.03.15
更新日期2020.04.30










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