The Worship of Confucius in Japan
豆瓣
James McMullen
简介
How has Confucius, quintessentially and symbolically Chinese, been received throughout Japanese history? The Worship of Confucius in Japan provides the first overview of the richly documented and colorful Japanese version of the East Asian ritual to venerate Confucius, known in Japan as the sekiten. The original Chinese political liturgy embodied assumptions about sociopolitical order different from those of Japan. Over more than thirteen centuries, Japanese in power expressed a persistently ambivalent response to the ritual’s challenges and often tended to interpret the ceremony in cultural rather than political terms.
Like many rituals, the sekiten self-referentially reinterpreted earlier versions of itself. James McMullen adopts a diachronic and comparative perspective. Focusing on the relationship of the ritual to political authority in the premodern period, McMullen sheds fresh light on Sino–Japanese cultural relations and on the distinctive political, cultural, and social history of Confucianism in Japan. Successive sections of The Worship of Confucius in Japan trace the vicissitudes of the ceremony through two major cycles of adoption, modification, and decline, first in ancient and medieval Japan, then in the late feudal period culminating in its rejection at the Meiji Restoration. An epilogue sketches the history of the ceremony in the altered conditions of post-Restoration Japan and up to the present.
目录
Conventions (including a List of Abbreviations)
Appendixes
1 Nomenclature in the East Asian Cult of Confucius
2 Liturgical Details:
(a) Engishiki: The Ceremony’s Bureaucratic Roots
(b) The Liturgy of the 1670 Rinke Sekisai
(c) The Mid-Nineteenth Century Bakufu Sekiten: A Diagram and
Directives
3 Unofficial and Commoner Worship of Confucius in Tokugawa Japan
4 Early Tokugawa-Period Confucian Attitudes to the Sekiten
5 Notes on the Shōkōkan Documents and the Text of Zhu Shunshui’s Kaitei sekiten
gichū
6 Early Warrior Ceremonies
7 The Cult of Confucius in Korea, Vietnam, and Ryūkyū