Whaling on stage: a comparison of contemporary Japanese whale festivals

Pub Date : 2023-05-15 DOI:10.1080/0048721X.2023.2211393
Aike P. Rots, E. Haugan
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

ABSTRACT Conservative Japanese politicians, academics, and journalists regularly state that whaling is an essential part of their national heritage, expressed in material culture, folk songs, ritual practices, and festivals. Japan has several whale festivals (kujira matsuri): playful events at which participants re-enact Edo-period (1600–1868) coastal whaling practices and perform whaling-related songs and dances. This article compares the festivals of Taiji (Wakayama), Kayoi (Yamaguchi), Shinkami-gotō (Nagasaki), and Ayukawa (Miyagi). It argues that these festivals not only have economic and social significance for the communities in question; they also support the notion of Japan as a traditional whaling nation. By organising and participating in these festivals, local priests, volunteers, and audiences enact this imagined whaling heritage, thus supporting the agenda of the present-day whaling industry. However, local actors have their own motivations and interests, and in fact the celebration of whaling heritage is not contingent upon the continuation of whaling today.
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舞台上的捕鲸:当代日本捕鲸节的比较
摘要日本保守派政治家、学者和记者经常表示,捕鲸是他们国家遗产的重要组成部分,表现在物质文化、民歌、仪式和节日中。日本有几个鲸鱼节(kujira matsuri):在这些有趣的活动中,参与者重现江户时代(1600–1868)的沿海捕鲸活动,并表演与捕鲸相关的歌曲和舞蹈。本文比较了和歌山(Wakayama)、山口(Yamaguchi)、长崎(Shinkami gotō)和宫城(Ayukawa)的太极节。它认为,这些节日不仅对相关社区具有经济和社会意义;他们也支持日本作为传统捕鲸国家的观点。通过组织和参与这些节日,当地牧师、志愿者和观众创造了这种想象中的捕鲸遗产,从而支持了当今捕鲸业的议程。然而,当地行动者有自己的动机和利益,事实上,庆祝捕鲸遗产并不取决于今天捕鲸的继续。
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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