Daoist Cosmogony in the <i>Kojiki</i> 古事記 Preface

A close reading of the cosmogony found in the preface to Ō no Yasumaro 太安萬侶’s <i>Kojiki</i> 古事記 (<i>Record of Ancient Matters,</i> 712 CE) reveals the ways in which Japan’s early Nara period elites appropriated aspects of China’s Daoist traditions for their own literary, myth...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jeffrey L. Richey
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-09-01
Series:Religions
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/12/9/761
Description
Summary:A close reading of the cosmogony found in the preface to Ō no Yasumaro 太安萬侶’s <i>Kojiki</i> 古事記 (<i>Record of Ancient Matters,</i> 712 CE) reveals the ways in which Japan’s early Nara period elites appropriated aspects of China’s Daoist traditions for their own literary, mythological, and political purposes. This debt to Daoism on the part of the oldest Shintō 神道 scripture, in turn, reveals the extent to which Daoist traditions were eclectically mined for content that early Japanese elites found useful, rather than transmitted as intact lineages. This also raises questions about whether and how “Daoism” has functioned as a systematic body of doctrines and practices, whether in China or overseas. The essay argues that Ō no Yasumaro’s appropriation of the Daoist cosmogonic repertoire is consistent with Daoist traditions as they developed during China’s Six Dynasties and Tang periods—that is, with Daoism as it existed contemporaneously with the early Nara period, when the <i>Kojiki</i> was compiled.
ISSN:2077-1444