A Magnificent Empress, A Brilliant Old Man, and an Ugly Navigator: The Uncanny Bodies of Maritime Deities in Narratives of Empress Jingū

IF 0.6 0 RELIGION Journal of Religion in Japan Pub Date : 2023-12-20 DOI:10.1163/22118349-01202006
Emily B. Simpson
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Abstract

Although the legend of Empress Jingū and her divinely mandated conquest of the Korean peninsula first appeared in the Kojiki and Nihon shoki, narratives of Empress Jingū proliferated in the fourteenth century. Following the Mongol Invasions, shifts in worldview, particularly regarding Japan’s relationship with the Asian continent, contributed to changes in how kami were conceptualized. In late medieval Jingū narratives, the kami who assist Empress Jingū take corporeal forms and become active agents in the human world. Drawing on Ernst Jentsch, Motoori Norinaga, and Rudolph Otto, I argue that these kami inhabit uncanny bodies: their physical forms appear human, but contain uncanny attributes that reveal their divinity to observant humans within the narrative. From Jingū in suprahuman form, Sumiyoshi as an old yet incredibly strong man, and Azumi no Isora’s barnacle-encrusted face, I illustrate how uncanny aspects of the physical bodies of kami signify their divine nature.

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风华绝代的皇后、才华横溢的老人和丑陋的航海家:靖后传中海上神仙的不寻常之躯
虽然神宫皇后及其受命征服朝鲜半岛的传说最早出现在《古事记》和《日本书纪》中,但关于神宫皇后的叙述在 14 世纪大量出现。蒙古入侵后,世界观的转变,尤其是日本与亚洲大陆关系的转变,促使人们改变了对神的概念。在中世纪晚期的神宫叙事中,协助神宫皇后的神灵有了肉身,并成为人类世界的积极推动者。借鉴恩斯特-詹茨(Ernst Jentsch)、纪永元守(Motoori Norinaga)和鲁道夫-奥托(Rudolph Otto)的观点,我认为这些神灵居住在不可思议的身体中:他们的身体形态看似人类,但却包含不可思议的属性,这些属性向叙事中善于观察的人类揭示了他们的神性。我将从超人形态的神宫、年老却异常强壮的住吉以及阿墨之伊索拉满脸藤壶的面容等方面,说明神灵肉体的不可思议之处是如何显示其神性的。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
33.30%
发文量
6
期刊介绍: JRJ is committed to an approach based on religious studies, and is open to contributions coming from different disciplines, such as anthropology, sociology, history, Buddhist studies, Japanese studies, art history, and area studies. The Journal of Religion in Japan encourages critical application of ideas and theories about Japanese religions and constitutes a forum for new theoretical developments in the field of religion in Japan. The Journal does not provide a venue for inter-religious dialogue and confessional approaches.
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