TY - JOUR
T1 - The ee ja nai ka and the meiji restoration
T2 - A view from Nagoya through hosono yōsai's kankyō manpitsu
AU - Miura, Takashi
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2019 Brill Academic Publishers. All rights reserved.
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - Hosono Yōsai (1811-1878), an Owari domain official, left a voluminous diary titled Kankyō manpitsu (Random Jottings Composed at Leisure), containing accounts from 1836 to 1878. Entries addressing the late months of 1867 describe the ee ja nai ka phenomenon that developed in Nagoya. Yōsai's portrayals of the ee ja nai ka contradict its received image as a rowdy pandemonium in which the populace expressed their resentment against the Tokugawa regime. Rather, what we see is a series of localized religious activities commemorating talismans (ofuda) that reportedly fell from the sky, many of them representing deities particularly popular in Nagoya. Based on an examination of Kankyō manpitsu, this article argues that the relationship between the ee ja nai ka and the Meiji Restoration must be evaluated on a region-specific basis and that the narrative of the Meiji Restoration is not directly relevant to understanding the nature of the ee ja nai ka in Nagoya.
AB - Hosono Yōsai (1811-1878), an Owari domain official, left a voluminous diary titled Kankyō manpitsu (Random Jottings Composed at Leisure), containing accounts from 1836 to 1878. Entries addressing the late months of 1867 describe the ee ja nai ka phenomenon that developed in Nagoya. Yōsai's portrayals of the ee ja nai ka contradict its received image as a rowdy pandemonium in which the populace expressed their resentment against the Tokugawa regime. Rather, what we see is a series of localized religious activities commemorating talismans (ofuda) that reportedly fell from the sky, many of them representing deities particularly popular in Nagoya. Based on an examination of Kankyō manpitsu, this article argues that the relationship between the ee ja nai ka and the Meiji Restoration must be evaluated on a region-specific basis and that the narrative of the Meiji Restoration is not directly relevant to understanding the nature of the ee ja nai ka in Nagoya.
KW - Akiba Daigongen
KW - Ee ja nai ka
KW - Hosono Yōsai
KW - Kankyō manpitsu
KW - Meiji Restoration
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U2 - 10.1163/22118349-00703001
DO - 10.1163/22118349-00703001
M3 - Review article
SN - 2211-8330
VL - 7
SP - 201
EP - 218
JO - Journal of Religion in Japan
JF - Journal of Religion in Japan
IS - 3
ER -