Week 8a Outline:
I. Intro to the Edo/Tokugawa period (1603-1868)
1. 1467 (Onin Wars) to 1603 perpetual civil war between powerful samurai clans ("Warring States Period")
2. Tokugawa Ieyasu takes control with Battle of Sekigahara (1600) and is appointed Shogun in 1603;
Ieyasu completely consolidates his control with the siege of Osaka Castle and the death of Toyotomi Hideyoshi (1615)
a. Hierarchy of roles originating in the basic notion of filial piety
b. Four class system1) Samurai
2) Peasants
3) Artisans
4) Merchants
5) outside the system: emperor and court aristocracy; religious figures; doctors;
actors and prostitutes; other outcaste groupsc. Destruction of major Pure Land Buddhist temple in Osaka (same time as the siege of Osaka Castle); 15,000 people died
d. 1639: Seclusion of the country (country closed to foreigners, persecution of Christian converts)
C. Economics
D. If samurai can no longer fight, what can they use to defend their claim to be the appropriate
rulers of the country?
1. "Code of the Samurai" (Bushidô) develops
2. Tension between merchants and samurai
a. fixed rice stipend and inflation causes samurai to get in debt to merchants
b. government periodically cancels the samurai debt
3. Righteous vendettas
a. Neo-Confucianism versus Buddhist ideas about passionate attachment
b. sympathy of audience
2. Who was the audience/patron for these genres?
3. What was the main goal?
a.
b.
4. How (and why) did samurai Neo-Confucian values affect stories?
a. Censorship, eg. "Reward the good, Punish the evil" (but level of censorship changes over time)
1. What they want
2. patronage and authorship
3. How female ghosts in Noh look
a. ghosts of women tormented by love
b. angry, vengeful ghosts
III. Visual Representation of Female Ghosts in the late 18th- 19th centuries
A. Edo period ghosts (yûrei, "dim/hazy spirits")
1. Major influences: Kabuki and woodblock prints
B. Ghost of Oyuki, mistress of Maruyama Ôkyo (1733-1795)
1. Characteristics
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.Influence of Kabuki
C. Yugao (mistress of Genji killed by Rokujo), by Tsukioka Yoshitoshi (1839-1892)
1. Characteristics
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
D. Okiku (killed by Aoyama Tessan)
1. Image 1 characteristics
2. Image 2 characteristics
3. Image 3 characteristics
1. Other stories involving pregnant women
a. woman who buys rice candy every night
b. Ubume1, Ubume2 (cf Blood Pool Hell)
2. Comparison to Heian period mononoke possession of pregnant women (highly political)
3. Contemporary anxiety about abortion
a. Statues of Bodhisattva Jizo (traditionally used to memorialize/ritually help miscarried or aborted children,
or any child who dies young) image, image, imageb. Modern form of the Mizuko-kuyo ritual develops in the 1970s in response to modern abortion--why?