Introducing the Research Project “Sacred Narrative – The Political Dimension of Japanese Mythology” Cover Image

Introducing the Research Project “Sacred Narrative – The Political Dimension of Japanese Mythology”
Introducing the Research Project “Sacred Narrative – The Political Dimension of Japanese Mythology”

Author(s): Klaus Antoni, Julia Dolkovski, Louise Neubronner
Subject(s): Customs / Folklore, Government/Political systems, Politics and society, Cultural Anthropology / Ethnology
Published by: Wydawnictwo Adam Marszałek
Keywords: Japanese mythology; Kojiki; Nihon shoki; sacralization; political mythology; Jinmu-tennō; Motoori Norinaga; myth in popular culture;

Summary/Abstract: The Kojiki and Nihon shoki have been integral to the formation of Japanese identity, especially since the 18th century. As such, they were constantly exposed to processes of sacralization and desacralization, i.e., the attribution and removal of authority. The research project “Sacred Narrative – The Political Dimension of Japanese Mythology” is concerned with how certain systems of thought or ideology used these texts in a way that raised them to an elevated position or deprived them of it. Organized in three focus areas, the project delves into the topic of the historical change the Kojiki and Nihon shoki underwent in terms of interpretation and instrumentalization from the Edo period up to modern-day Japan. These investigations are integrated into the research group “De/Sacralization of Texts” at the University of Tübingen that started its work in January 2022. In this interdisciplinary context, “Sacred narrative” seeks to promote the integration of East-Asian textuality into general theory formation.

  • Issue Year: 37/2023
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 29-71
  • Page Count: 43
  • Language: English