美穗神社供奉神灵的音乐玩具:更新仪式交流的乐器

IF 0.3 3区 哲学 0 RELIGION JAPANESE JOURNAL OF RELIGIOUS STUDIES Pub Date : 2018-07-01 DOI:10.18874/jjrs.45.2.2018.391-422
Fumio Ouchi
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引用次数: 0

摘要

Ouchi Fumi是宫城县女子大学教育学院的音乐学教授。本文调查了音乐玩具和微缩模型在Miho邪教现代发展中所扮演的社会宗教角色。岛根县的弥荷神社发展了一种独特的做法,接受向供奉在那里的神灵捐赠乐器,这得到了当地神灵非常喜欢音乐的传统的支持。从明治时期开始,除了精致的乐器,微缩模型和简单的音乐玩具也开始被带进神社。本文从社会历史、民族志、声音文化等方面进行了综合考察,以确定通过玩具流通形成的新网络。这些网络有助于创造赋予小型音乐物体的仪式力量的现代概念,为世俗音乐提供新的解释,为微型和玩具乐器提供新的仪式角色,甚至为Miho神提供新的特征。特别是,这些玩具的基本特征——可以进行物理操作的小型音乐物体——是邪教现代演变的基础。
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Musical Toys Offered to Gods at Miho Shrine: Instruments for Renewing Ritual Communication
Ouchi Fumi is Professor of Musicology in the Faculty of Education at Miyagi Gakuin Women’s University. This article investigates the socioreligious roles that musical toys and miniatures have performed in the modern development of the Miho cult. Miho Shrine in Shimane Prefecture developed a distinctive practice of accepting donations of musical instruments to the deities enshrined there, which was supported by a local tradition that the deities are extremely fond of music. Along with sophisticated instruments, miniatures and simple musical toys also began to be brought into the shrine from the Meiji period onward. This article takes a comprehensive look at sociohistorical, ethnographical, sound-cultural, and other aspects to identify new networks formed through the toys’ circulation. These networks helped to create modern conceptions of the ritual power imparted to small musical objects, giving new explanations to secular music, new ritual roles to miniature and toy musical instruments, and even new features to the Miho deities. In particular, the essential features of the toys—small musical objects that are physically manipulated—were a basis for the modern evolution of the cult.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
10
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊介绍: The Japanese Journal of Religious Studies is a peer-reviewed journal registered as an Open Access Journal with all content freely downloadable. The journal began in 1960 as Contemporary Religions in Japan, which was changed to the JJRS in 1974. It has been published by the Nanzan Institute since 1981. The JJRS aims for a multidisciplinary approach to the study of religion in Japan, and submissions are welcomed from scholars in all fields of the humanities and social sciences. To submit a manuscript or inquiry about publishing in our journal, please contact us at the address below.
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