
Kyoto Lectures 2017-02-27
27 FEBRUARY 17
École Francaise d’Extrême-Orient EFEO
Scuola Italiana di Studi sull'Asia Orientale ISEAS
(European Consortium for Asian Field Study, ECAF)
KYOTO LECTURES 2017
Monday, February 27th, 18:00h
co-hosted by Institute for Research in Humanities, Kyoto University
This lecture will be held at the Institut for Research in Humanities (IRH), Kyoto University (seminar room 1, 1st floor)
The Archaic in the Modern. Orikuchi Shinobu on Man'yō Japan and the Ryukyus
Speaker: Chiara Ghidini
This talk aims to investigate how writer, poet and folklorist Orikuchi Shinobu (1887-1953) attempted on re-enacting antiquity (kodai) in early 20th-century Japan, both through essays and fiction. Also, it will emphasise the social and cultural orientations of his time and shed light on his (un?)scholarly approach, in between mysticism
and anthropology, to use the definition historian Momigliano applied to Swiss
jurist and philologist Johann Jakob Bachofen, whose works Orikuchi probably
gained access to through his readings of James Frazer and Okinawan researcher
Sakima Kōei.
In crafting his vision of Japanese antiquity, Orikuchi was inspired by theories related to the search for ancestral origins, the need to preserve and revive oral transmission, and the crucial role supposedly played by women in the ritual “everyday life” of a remote, almost mythical, past. Lamenting the lack of belief in contemporary Japan, he located the site where the "cultural principles"
of such an envisioned kodai were still being reproduced and perpetuated in the Ryukyus, by then formally annexed to Japan and mostly included within Okinawa Prefecture.
Chiara Ghidini is Lecturer in East Asian Religions at the University of Naples “L’Orientale”. She received her PhD from the University of Cambridge. Her dissertation dealt with Orikuchi Shinobu’s Book of the Dead and the (re-)construction of antiquity in modern Japan. She is presently working on the Ryūkyū Shintō ki, recorded by the Pure Land Buddhist priest Taichū shōnin (1552-1639) at the request of court officials. She is also involved in an interdisciplinary research project aimed to produce a cultural history of mental illness in Taiwan.
For detailed directions:
http://www.zinbun.kyoto-u.ac.jp/e/institute/access-institute/access_e.htm
École Francaise d’Extrême-Orient (EFEO)
Italian School of East Asian Studies (ISEAS)
EFEO
Phone: 075-701-0882
Fax: 075-701-0883
e-mail: efeo.kyoto@gmail.com
ISEAS
Phone: 075-751-8132
Fax: 075-751-8221
e-mail: iseas@iseas-kyoto.org
kyoto lectures
Scuola Italiana di Studi sull'Asia Orientale ISEAS
(European Consortium for Asian Field Study, ECAF)
KYOTO LECTURES 2017
Monday, February 27th, 18:00h
co-hosted by Institute for Research in Humanities, Kyoto University
This lecture will be held at the Institut for Research in Humanities (IRH), Kyoto University (seminar room 1, 1st floor)
The Archaic in the Modern. Orikuchi Shinobu on Man'yō Japan and the Ryukyus
Speaker: Chiara Ghidini
This talk aims to investigate how writer, poet and folklorist Orikuchi Shinobu (1887-1953) attempted on re-enacting antiquity (kodai) in early 20th-century Japan, both through essays and fiction. Also, it will emphasise the social and cultural orientations of his time and shed light on his (un?)scholarly approach, in between mysticism
and anthropology, to use the definition historian Momigliano applied to Swiss
jurist and philologist Johann Jakob Bachofen, whose works Orikuchi probably
gained access to through his readings of James Frazer and Okinawan researcher
Sakima Kōei.
In crafting his vision of Japanese antiquity, Orikuchi was inspired by theories related to the search for ancestral origins, the need to preserve and revive oral transmission, and the crucial role supposedly played by women in the ritual “everyday life” of a remote, almost mythical, past. Lamenting the lack of belief in contemporary Japan, he located the site where the "cultural principles"
of such an envisioned kodai were still being reproduced and perpetuated in the Ryukyus, by then formally annexed to Japan and mostly included within Okinawa Prefecture.
Chiara Ghidini is Lecturer in East Asian Religions at the University of Naples “L’Orientale”. She received her PhD from the University of Cambridge. Her dissertation dealt with Orikuchi Shinobu’s Book of the Dead and the (re-)construction of antiquity in modern Japan. She is presently working on the Ryūkyū Shintō ki, recorded by the Pure Land Buddhist priest Taichū shōnin (1552-1639) at the request of court officials. She is also involved in an interdisciplinary research project aimed to produce a cultural history of mental illness in Taiwan.
For detailed directions:
http://www.zinbun.kyoto-u.ac.jp/e/institute/access-institute/access_e.htm
École Francaise d’Extrême-Orient (EFEO)
Italian School of East Asian Studies (ISEAS)
EFEO
Phone: 075-701-0882
Fax: 075-701-0883
e-mail: efeo.kyoto@gmail.com
ISEAS
Phone: 075-751-8132
Fax: 075-751-8221
e-mail: iseas@iseas-kyoto.org
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DECEMBER NOVEMBER OCTOBER SEPTEMBER AUGUST JULY JUNE MAY APRIL MARCH FEBRUARY 2016
2015
2014
2013
2012
2011
2010
2009
2008
anna seidel memorial lectures
architecture
cahiers d'extrême-asie
competition
conference
conferences
conferences
conferences
conservation and renovation of architecture in japan
construction
inauguration
jotoshiki
kyoto lectures
kyoto lectures
kyoto lectures
lecture series
library
news
nouvelles
parutions
prices and distinctions
publications
researchers
visiting scholars
workshop