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Nembutsu Odori by Elsabeth Moriarty

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Th e practice of reciting Nembutsu was first brought from China by Ennin (793-864) as part of the Jogyo-jdza-sammai Samadhi ( 座 三昧)1 and quickly became one of the most popular practices of Bud ­ dhism. Contemplation of A mida with the repetition of the words (NamaAmida-Buddha’2 was believed to be one of the ways of attaining salvation in A m i d a’s Pure Land. However it was Kuya Shonin (903-972) w h o first introduced Nembutsu Odori as a ritual dance and recitation of Nembutsu to obtain salvation, and who, for this purpose, travelled all over the country instructing the people.

Th e Nembutsu of Kuya m a y still be seen in some parts of Japan, notably in Aizu district. There the story is told of h o w Kuya came to Tokizawa in Aizu and was surprised and saddened by the people’s ignorance of Buddhism. H e stayed in Hachioji and tried to help people of all ages reach salvation by faith in Amida. W h e n he preached to the children, he asked them to chant Nembutsu, almost without thinking. If they did this, he promised to give them nishiki-e (錦絵)3 and to dance for them.1 hus began Nembutsu Odori. Kuya danced with a small

drum, mame-daiko (豆 太 鼓 ),while reciting Nembutsu because he wanted to attract the children to this religious practice. The dance was not formal, in fact he tried to make it amusing for the children and encouraged them to do the same. This was the simple dance-ritual that 1. Jogyo means a practice done while incessantly walking round, and

joza means practice done while sitting immobile. This samadnt method was also called in-zei Nembutsu (sing-song) ; or fudan (incessant chanting) ; or Yama-noNembutsu (mountain) because it came from Enryakuji on Mt. Hiei. See: Ennius Dairy: The Record of a Pilgrim to China in Search of the Law (Trans. E. O. Reischauer); Folk Religion in Japan, I. Hori.


2. The daily practice of Tendai monks was the recitation of the Lotus Sutra {Hokke-zammai) in the morning, and the Nembutsu-zammai in the evening which they called Yu-Nembutsu. See Hori, op. cit., p. 96. 3. A form of holy-picture of Buddhist teaching.


he taught in his wanderings all over Japan.4 H o w is this Nembutsu Odori performed in Tokizawa today? The people first gather in a sesshu-ko and, facing the Buddha, they chant seven kinds of o-kyo ( )6—zangebun (懺悔文),sanki (三帚)and sankyo are very short sentences each chanted three times,then jusanhotoke (十三佛)or the thirteen names of Buddha, and komydshingon (光明真言) are each chanted three times after which Kannon Uta (観 音 歌 )is read. All then face the big drum and say ekd (囘向)or prayers for the dead. While the drums beat in a very definite pattern フ 2 times and the people do a simple Nembutsu Odori dance,stamping

and moving rhythmically, the sharikyo (舎利経)is chanted.7 The dancers do not wear special clothes,though sometimes they m a y wear very bright yukata (浴衣) . They count the rhythm with the help of yotsutake (四っ竹)or two bamboo sticks, and dance with small drums.8 T m s whole section of dance,d ru m and chant is repeated three times. Then they divide into two groups,one group beating drums while

the other chants Yohogatame-no-ekd (四方堅めの囘向)9 which speaks 01 the various Pure juands oi Buddhism and explains that n you oecome 4. Honda Yasuji: The Diffusion of Dengaku (田楽,風流,本田安治著,木 耳社,三 踊 ㈠会津の念仏踊) 106.

5. I司上 a sesshu-ko: a prayer group to get the spirit of Budaha. 6. Zange-bun (lit. confession sentence). sanKi: return to nirvana, sankyo: the atmosphere of the Buddha, the Law, and the Monks. komyo-Shingon: lit. Bright-light-Shingon. The thirteen Buddha: Namufudo,Shaka, Monju,Fugen, Jizo, Miroku, Yakushi,Kannon, Seishi, Amida, DainichiKokuzo, Abin. See: Japanese Buddhism, Sir C. Eliot, Ch. 4, p . 11フ ff.

7. The drum-beats are carefully divided into several parts. Each part has a special name and a definite number of beats: shitachi dori (下)(10),O-okuri (大) (3),hidari sode (左袖) (13),migi sode (右袖)(4),U-achidori (上) (3), yoi yoi ( ヨイヨイ) (4),naka-musubi (5),hidari-musubi (5),migi-musubi (2), suriage (6),yama-goshi ( 山越し)(8),uchi-kiri (9). See: Honda (above note 4 ), p. 1018.

8. The usual instruments for Odori Nembutsu hayashi or accompaniment are: Taiko or large drum, Mame-daiko or small drum,flute, yotsu-take or bamboo sticks, two kinds of bells3 the uchi-kin and in-Kin, and sometimes the sho and the hichiriki two special wind instruments. See: Honda, I.e., p. 1019.

9. Yohogatame means ‘keeping things safe in four directions,. Each of these directions represent a Pure Land or Jodo, and has a special colour. East is blue and is the heaven which belongs to Yakushi-juni-shin-ruri-ko-Nyorai. West is white or gold and is the heaven of Amida-sanzon. South is red and is the Jodo or heaven of Myokan-zei-on-Bosatsu. North is black, the Jodo of Shaka-ben-niButsu. The centre is the earth,the Jodo of Chuo-Dainichi-Nyorai. The five directions symbolize the gogyd or five lines between heaven and earth,the five elements, five spirits, all is formed from wood, fire,earth, water and metal. See: Honda, I.e., p. 1018,1019.


a disciple of Shaka, it does not matter to which sect you belong, for Shaka will protect you. Again the drums beat 72 times while Nembutsu Odori is performed. This m a y be repeated several times. Th e dance is not formal at all,mostly stamping and rhythmic body movements, and m a y be followed by a comical play. Zuii-no-eko (隨意の囘向) follows auring which anyone m a v say a prayer. Lach prayer is followed by Nembutsu intercession and dance to the beat of drums. A very short

prayer, Naka-iri-eko (中入囘向),ends with the remark: Because d r u m ­ mers and bell ringers are tired, shall we stop here for a while? All then partake of a meal and quiet rest,after which they return to their places for more Zuii-no-eko if desired. So-age-eko 相上囘向)ends the ritual with the words: It is a pity to stop, but already the sun is setting, so till next year w e shall say eoodbye. The steady beat of the drums and frequent stamping movements are typical shamanic techniques to produce ecstasy,so it seems clear that Nembutsu Odori of K uy a continued the shamanic tradition of Japanese folk religion.

As w e see in this ritual, not only is Nembutsu recited and danced as K uy a suggested, but ekd, or prayers for the dead,are also recited. As such prayers are n o w an integral part of Nembutsu Oaori,we need to investigate their origin. The first written record of Japanese life comes to us from the Chinese Kingdom of Wei where we read, about their mourning customs: “Th e head mourners wail and lament,while friends sing, dance and drink liquor.”10 From earliest times it seems, Japanese people have expressed their belier in the spirits of the dead by dancinp* and sinering.1 he basic concepts of Japanese folk religion, namely those of uji-pami ( ) and hito-gami (人 )11 have interacted over the centuries, but the hito-gami concept seems to be the one that specifically

concerns us here. T h e hito-gami system was based on the close relationship between a kami and a charismatic person or shaman w h o could also become a kami,either in life or after death. M a n and Kami are interdependent in Shinto belief. Outstanding personalities were,in these early times, deified by a wide circle of believers forming as it were a

super-clan, whereas the uji-pami were clan ancestor kami. These hitogami performed special functions in protecting their clients,reflecting the 10. Wei Chih,c.A.D. 297, from Sources of Japanese Tradition,Vol.1, W. T. De Bary,p. 7.

1 1 . Uji-gami were deified ancestral spirits who were worshipped by their descendants only. It was a special ‘in-group’ in village life, and those who worshipped were called uji-ko. Hito-gami belonged to the super-clan. Only nobles

or important religious figures could become such. See: Hori, pp. 30-34.

work they had performed during life,often showing magico-religious power, as well as their socio-political and economic situation. With the coming of Buddhism, Confucianism and Taoism by the sixth century^ the belief in hito-gami was transformed into goryd-shin (御霊神)•12 Originally goryo were believed to be angry spirits of nobles w h o had died tragically and whose malevolent activities were often explained to the people through shamanic trance.13 Gradually all social and personal crises were attributed to them during what Hori calls the Goryd-shin Age from the eighth to the twelfth century.14 Three kinds

of magic developed to appease these angry spirits, Nembutsu, Shu^endo15 and Onyo-do.16 Though Nembutsu was originally directed to the practice of reciting A mi da,s n a me in order to be saved in A m i a a,s Pure Land, by the end of the eleventh century it was mainly a negative magic against goryo, with shamanistic forms to give security against fear of these spirits.1 his concept of Goryo therefore incorporated animistic and hito-gami beliefs, as well as shamanism and Mantrayana magic.17 Gradually the possibility of becoming a goryo or deified spirit extended to the c o m m o n people. At the m o m e nt of death, the will of the person was considered most effective in becoming a goryo. So too,in Nembutsu practice, this m om e n t was stressed as decisive for attaining A mi d a,s Pure Land.

After K u y a,s death, Gens hm (948-1017) developed Nembutsu, not only with dancing,but with drama in the Mukae-ko service in which was enacted the descent of A m id a and m a n y Bosatsu to welcome the 12. Goryo were well established by the end of the eighth century (Nara period).

13. By 863 five major goryo-shin deities were worshipped, and a Goryo-e festival was held to appease their anger which people thought was causing plague. However Sugawara-no-Michizana (845—903) was the most famous of these deities. He had died tragically, many catastrophes occurred within the next few years, until a shamaness, possessed by Sugawara5s spirit, revealed that he was causing these troubles. He was promptly deified and given a shrine, Kitano-jmja in Kyoto, whereupon their troubles ceased. Genji Monogatari and other Heian literature frequently mention goryo. See Hori, p . 112 fF. Also The World of the Shining Prince, Ivan Morris.

14. Hori, p. 72.

15. Shugen~do: Buddhist asceticism mixed with Shinto, Buddhism, Taoist and popular Shamanism. Hori, p. 52. 16. Onyo-do: Religious Taoism mixed with primitive shamanism. Ibid. 17. Mantrayana: 丁antric Buddhism found its way into China in the eighth century where it is called Chen-yen (true word) or Mi-chiao (secret teaching). In Japanese Chen-yen became Sningon, however Tendai also practised some of its esoterism.


spirits of believers to the Pure Land.18 As a result m a ny holy m e n or hi]in ( ),19 w h o practised Nembutsu, could be found in the cities, in village communities, and in the mountains, encouraging people to do the same. O n occasions, during plagues or other disasters in Kyoto, it became “Nembutsu madness”,so popular was it, and so frenzied did the crowds become.20 By the twelfth century, Ryonin (1072-1132) was preaching that Am ida had revealed to him; “Nembutsu recitation was infinitely

more meritorious if repeated on behalf of others than for one’s o w n selfish ends. It brings salvation not only to him w h o utters it,but to the whole h u m a n race, and if a m a n teaches others to repeat it,their merit will become his own.,,21 This period was considered the M a p p o Age, the age of complete degeneration, which Saicho had warned people about centuries earlier.22 While Nembutsu Odori degenerated into magic in the villages,the latter part of the twelfth century saw the renewal of Buddhism under H o ne n (1133-1215), the founder of the Jodo Sect,

w h o tried to purify and restate the doctrine of A mida and Nembutsu practice.23 His disciple Shinran (1173-1262) continued his work,24 but soon another charismatic figure was to be seen w h o would re-vitalize Nembutsu practice as never before. This was Chishin, known popularly as Ippen Shonin (1249-1289), the founder of the Ji Sect.25 Ippen,s wandering life was a very dramatic one,judging by the famous scrolls,Ippen Hi]iri-e (一 絵 ). After some early scenes of

his childhood, where even then he is travelling to far-off Tsukushi Province, w e see him as a monk, visiting Koya San and then moving on with his followers to K u m a n o Shrine where he receives a divine revelation 18. Genshin was the first patriarch of the Amiaist school. His book Ojoyoshu (往生要集) which Honen later read, introduced this patriarch to Zendo, who was supposed to be the incarnation of Amida in China. Ennin had brought his writings back with him from China.

19. Htjirt: Holy men who established common or folk Buddhism outside the orthodox ecclesiastical system, stressing the essentials of faith and unworldliness according to the needs of the age. The Amida^htjin, like Kuya, Genshin or Ryonin were evangelistic, while those of the Lotus Sutra, Like Zoga and Shoku, were individualistic and self-perfectionistic.

20. A shamanistic atmosphere.

2 1 . Eliot, p. 253.

22. See Hori,pp. 101-105; Eliot, p. 184.

23. See Eliot, p. 260,363.

24. Ibid., p. 360 ff.

25. Hori, p. 127-132. Ippen called his group the Ji or the Time Sect, because he maintained that his teaching was the proper one for the times in which he lived. Eliot, p. 274.


concerning Nembutsu, through a shaman there.26 In the fourth scroll we have a quiet country scene at Odagiri village in Shinano, where Ippen begins the practice of Nembutsu Odori by teaching a few astonished and happy farmers h o w to dance. It is a very rustic scene with farmers clapping hands or striking two wooden sticks together, as they sing Nembutsu, and stamp and jump around the fallow fields. By the sixth scroll he is travelling along the beach at Katase with grey or brown-clad farmers dancing Nembutsu Odori in a frame-like building on stilts, with a few sturdy beams holding up a floor,and a simple bamboo roof with planks

laid irregularly on the bamboo slats to keep them in place. Th e floor space is packed with happy, dancing farmers,but m a ny of them, n o w, are beating small drums as well as using wooden sticks for the rhythm. Around this open ‘chapel,the scene is delightfully chaotic. A few carriages have arrived with the local gentry and their lovely ladies in gay kimono, a biwa player gazes in amazement while his dog waits patiently beside him, a heavily laden pack-horse trudges past while his driver looks on in amusement,dogs fight, a crow tries to steal some food from a very emaciated man, country w o m e n chat in excitement and evident pleasure as they watch Nembutsu Odori. This makeshift £chapel,was the only kind Ippen ever used, and we see it often in these paintings.

Another scroll shows the same kind of (chapel’,filled with dancing figures. Small boys are clinging to some of the construction beams, while around the building, carriages of the gentry are crammed in riotous confusion. In between can be seen colourful noble ladies, suitably impressed, gentlemen in court dress gazing in astonishment or engaged in arguments over their restless horses or oxen, while monks with large umbrella-like hats seem to be lost in contemplation, or just bored by the commotion. O n e group with more initiative than the rest, have erected a special ‘grandstand’ some yards away,and, protected by large umbrellas, are gazing in admiration at Nembutsu Odori. Everywhere it seems, m e n and

w o m e n were searching for security and the happiness of A m i d a’s Pure Land, and wanted to experience mystical prayer by these stamping dances which could induce ecstasy. By the time he arrives in Kyoto,as depicted in the seventh scroll,and teaches in the Shaka-do at Kyogoku there is a 26. This is the height of Ryobu Shinto (twofold Shinto) phenomena, by which Buddhism mixed with Shinto, religious Taoism or Yin-Yang magic, and in this case shamanism. Ippen was also influenced by Zen which was very powerful in this Kamakura Era. He said, “When I repeat Nembutsu, there is neither myself nor the Buddha but simply the invocation.” And again, ^Singlemindedness is when one discards all thought of the body and is absolutely one with the Nembutsu.” Eliot, p. 274.


real traffic jam, to such an extent that it looks quite impossible to dance Nembutsu Odori in such confusion of carriages and people. But everywhere he goes there is music and dancing and joy. M e n have hope in a future life in A m i d a’s Pure Land as they dance Nembutsu Odori throughout the whole country.27

Such was the revival of Nembutsu Odori in Ippen’s day. lie did not teach a special dance form, but gradually it became formalized in different ways in different parts of the country. A fairly typical Rokusai Dai Nembutsu (六斎大念仏)28 m a y be seen today in Musliono Akiyamamura,Yamanashi Prefecture. Mushono is a village of only 47 families, facing the old Kamakura Kaido (road) with stupa along the sides of the road,29 as well as closojin (道祖神)30 to protect the inhabitants from devils. About 2,600 people live in the area and, until recently, they were all farmers, charcoal burners or sericulturalists.

Th e Dai Nembutsu takes place on January 16th each year,and for this the village is divided into two, kami (upper) and shirno (under),31 conveniently on either side of the Akiyama River. A toy a ( 当屋)32 is chosen for each division, and it is in these two houses that Nembutsu Odori takes place. This honour comes to each family in turn. All are invited to perform in the dancing, there is no limitation of age or sex. Th e ceremony begins in the do]o4ri (道場入り),that is the house of the Toya which is decorated outside with bamboo branches and

shimenawa (注 連 縄 ) like a Shinto shrine at festival time. The hachrjo. the room used for the ceremony, has bamboo poles in each corner, and one thick bamboo oya-hasmra (親 )33 in the middle. Shimenawa connect all corners with each other and with the centre, six pohei (御 幣 ) are hung from the shimenawa on each side of the room, and seven hang from the centre. O n top of the oya-hashira are straws, gohei and mamori fuda (守ネし).34 The gohei are coloured according to their position in

27. 「一遍聖絵

2 8 . 無生野の六斎大念仏調査報告.

29. Stupa are connected with the dead, or with Shugen-ja ( 修験者) who were priests of Shugen-do, a mixed school of Shinto, religious Taoism and Buddhism. The gradual cohesion of Nembutsu practices with practices based on the Lotus Sutra, centering in the Tendai Sect,brought about a union of Nembutsu practitioners with shupen-ja ascetics.

30. Dosojin: Pebbles, or large stones on which are carved characters or forms of people, as a talisman against evil spirits.

31. Kami (upper), shimo (lower).

32. Toya: The master of the host house where the festival takes place.

33. Oya-hashira: (lit. parent-pillar) a phallic symbol.

34. Mamori-fuda: A tablet or paper on which is written the name of a


the room: east, green; south, red; west,white; north, black; and yellow in the centre. O n each gohei is written the n a me R y u - 0 ? or dragon king, because of the nature of the o-kyo and dance which, w e shall see,is to dispel demons. All participants are in very simple white kimono or ordinary clothes. Three persons stand in front of the entrance, and the one in the middle,the kyd-shu or leader, says o-kyo in old Japanese: uDogen Zenji,35 w h o came from China, did this so w e are doing it too.

I a m one of his followers.” Th e dojo-kiyome or purification is then performed as they enter and scatter pebbles and salt around the dojo, after which the drums, sho and flute play, with no formal rhythm, as the hombutate begins. Then there is silence while the kyd-shu reads the o-kyo. This prayer speaks of the purity of heaven and earth,of m a n and says, “In the water of the pure river I will wash m y body and meditate on Shoshin Shobutsu (gods and Buddhas)36 after purifying myself.,,Then the origin of the gongen (権 現 )or lion mask is explained: “In India,on M y o - O 37 is a famous tree called Heihaku (平 白 ) with only three branches,all magically powerful. The first branch, called Uji Doji (雲寺童子),can

chase away kokufu ;38 the second branch, called Higen Doji, can dispel mononoke (物の怪);39 while the third, Genmyd Do】i, can get rid of akumaP^ Seven hotoke or Buddhas, five Nyorai (衣ロ来) and three Kami (ネ串) are welcomed to the d o ]o (^^) which n o w becomes Takamagahara (高天原)or the Heavens. Th e people are then reminded that the gohei and bamboo are symbols of Kami,that the sword represents M onju41

deity, distributed to the faithful by a shrine. Made of paper or wood. Generally regarded as a symbol of the god, enshrined in the kami-dana, or god-shelf, and reverenced morning and night to pray for divine aid.1 he number of these on the oya-hashira corresponded to the number of families in the Nembutsu-A:o or association, and would be distributed to each family after the festival. 35. Dogen Zenji (1200—1253) introduced the Soto Sect of Zen to Japan after studying it in China.

36. Shoshin Shobutsu: all the Kami and Hotoke.

37. Myo-0 were originally personifications of magic formulae, imported into Shingon from late Indian Tantric Buddhism. They correspond to the manifestations of Siva in Brahmanism, and, though of terrible appearance, they are benevolent. It is interesting that they should give a mountain such a name.

38. Kokufu: evils of the nation.

39. Mononoke (物の怪): also called Oni or Tamashii. A fearful spirit causing illness and other disasters, often used to avoid saying 'devil,, Means something mysterious.

40. Akuma ( 悪魔): devil. 4 1 . Monju or Manjusri: a great Boddhisattva, the personification of wisdom and intellect, and is usually depicted with the sword of knowledge and a book.


Akudara no it a: a board used by Akudara, one of the Buddhas. Bushari: the contracted form of Butsu Hotoke Shari. Kyoshu-no-kit6: lit. leader of a prayer. Kemmu Period:1334—1336.

and that the board41a can chase away devils (akum a)(悪魔). Th e sho is then played and two persons beat the big d ru m while chanting sharikyo (舎矛1J経 ). Shari (舎禾lj) is an Indian word meaning ‘bones,of hotoke or spirits. Hotoke originally referred to Buddha, but n o w it also means the spirits of the dead. This sharikyo reminds the listeners that through the good influence of others (korishu),one trains oneself in Buddhism to lead a virtuous life. They are reminded that the sharito (舎禾IJ塔) or bones of holy persons are in the pagoda, or bushari (仏舎利)-42 So they chant the sharikyo three times.

T w o sword dances follow to the music of the flute, sho (gE) and the beat of the big drums. In the Ippon Dachi (一本太刀 ) two persons appear and sit facing each other, one with a sword, the other with a small drum. Taking these in their hands they dance round the big drum which is in the centre of the room. Then appears another person with a long bamboo pole, held in the middle,which he twirls as he twists his body from left to right. W hile the tempo of the music is slow, tadam aki, the sword is held parallel then raised up right and down left, or up left


and d o wn right,as if cutting something; when the tempo becomes very quick, chirashi, the dancers circle the d ru m rapidly in time with the music. Both tadamaki and chirashi are repeated in turn four times. In the Nihon Dachi (ニ本太刀 ) the instruments and music are the same; but the sword dancer holds a sword in each hand and crosses them frequently in the chirashi part. Buparai (ぶ つ 払し、) is held in the room next to the do]o. Here are prepared futon and blankets,where a sick person,in need of prayers


lies in bed. Beside it is a small table on which are nine gohei and straws tied together like stooks of hay. The kyd-shu, or leader, kneels beside the bed, pulls out gohei one by one, and touches the body of the sick person with each,while saying Kyoshu-no-kito (教主の祈_).43 Meanwhile the sword dances continue in the dop,then they come into this room and dance, stamping and leaping lightly here and there in Nembutsu no Futa (念仏の蓋) . They return to the do]o and continue to dance Nembutsu Odori, while all join in with small drums, leaping,stamping and singing Nembutsu, with obvious enjoyment. T he villagers say the origin of this dance goes back to the Kamakura period. Daito-gu was killed on July 16th in K e m m u 2^ and at that time his son, Tsuzure-no-0, was only 12


six years old. Princess Ilinezuru, when she heard of the tragedy, brought the head of Daito-gu to Akiyama village where, on December 29th, she gave birth to a son by him, but both mother and child died. W h e n Tsuzure-no-0 heard his father’s head was at Akiyama, he went there, found the other two dead, and so began the Dai Nembutsu for them. Lastly, in the Okun Dashi,or sending away, the leader prays quietly himself while the people chant; then they go dow n to the doma45 where he says another prayer, “I can chase away the mononokef and he shakes the sword three times, then prays to the Hotoke in a special Sharikyo, called Sharireibun, which is used at Zen funerals. There is a Zen temple in the village.


This Rokusai Dai Nembutsu has come a long way from the simple stamping and leaping dance of K u y a or of the dance w e see in the scrolls of Ippen,s life. There seems to be less emphasis on Nembutsu to attain salvation for the living, and greater stress on appeasing spirits of the dead and obtaining salvation for them. Within the ritual can be seen elements of animism, shamanism, Shinto, Tantric Buddhism. Perhaps because of its syncretic and loosely defined characteristics, Nembutsu Odori is found as a normal part of other festivals, such as the famous

Gion festival in Kyoto, or in some areas at the time of the O-Bon to appease the hungry spirits of those w h o have no relatives to give them spiritual benefits. Today in m a n y places, Nembutsu Odori has lost its religious character almost entirely, and in others, in times of village crises,it is requested and performed by villagers, saying a million N e m ­ butsu prayers to the accompaniment of drum, gong and flute, under the leadership of a Nembutsu-mjtri or of a village elder, to drive away insects, plague, or as a prayer for rain.# The recitation of a million N e m ­ butsu seems to be part of ritual magic to obtain what is desired, as the villagers dance to the trance-enticing accents of the drum, just as they have done throughout the centuries in rural Japan.


Bibliography


Bowers, Faubion, Japanese Theatre. Hermitage House, New York, 1952.

Eliot, Charles, Japanese Buddhism. Arnold & Co., London, 1935 . Hori, Ichiro, Folk Religion in Japan. Univ. of Tokyo Press, Tokyo, 1968.

田 楽 • 風流,本 田 安 治 著 1976 Sept.

無生野の六斎大念仏調査報告芸能史研究会国学院大学折ロ博士記念古代研究所 本 樹 捕 絵 一 辺 絵 角 川 出 版 1964

45. Doma: a room with an earthen floor, usually used as a kitchen in ancient times.

46. Hori, p. 137.



Source


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