Vol. 8, No. 1
December 1997
Abbess Mugai Nyodai
(1223 - 1298)
ANNOUNCING
International Research Conference
"THE CULTURE OF CONVENTS
IN
JAPANESE HISTORY"
Institute for Medieval Japanese Studies
Columbia University
Institute and
Project Director: Professor Barbara Ruch
November 21-23,
1998
Project
Description
Commemorating the 30th
anniversary of its founding in 1968, the Institute for Medieval Japanese
Studies will hold an international conference on "The Culture of Convents
in Japanese History" in the fall of 1998. A direct outgrowth of the Institute’s
Imperial Buddhist Convent Survey Project, ongoing since 1993, the conference
will enable its international team of scholars to report to a broader audience
of scholars on the heretofore unexamined materials that are now emerging
in the survey, some of which dates back to the thirteenth century.
The conference will
be the central academic core of the broader commemoration, which is planned
to honor the thirteenth century Rinzai Zen Abbess Mugai Nyodai (1223-1298)
and thereby to further the research on her enormous legacy. [See FULL PROGRAM
on page 3.] The discovery of a magnificent life-size thirteenth century
chinso Zen sculpture portrait of Abbess Mugai Nyodai was one
of the initial revelatory events that drew scholarly attention to the whole
ignored female side of Buddhist institutional history and, more broadly,
to the role of women in Japanese religious history. In many ways, therefore,
she has been the inspiration, or the ‘patron saint’, as it were, to the
Institute’s research projects of the last decade. November 1998 corresponds
exactly to the 700th anniversary of her death. For this reason we plan
to open the research conference with a memorial service for her which will
be conducted at Columbia University in St. Paul’s Chapel by the abbesses
and nuns of the convents whose archives and storerooms we are now studying,
and who look back to her as their founder.
Two divisions
of Columbia University, the Rotunda Gallery and the Kress Room and Rare
Book Gallery of the C.V. Starr East Asian Library, are planning two supporting
exhibitions, the former on Columbia University Treasures of Buddhist Sculpture
and the latter, an exhibition that will focus on the lives of historic
nuns from the eight Imperial Buddhist Convents (ama monzeki jiin)
still remaining in Kyoto.
In Japan, the abbesses
and nuns of the convents have pledged their enthusiastic cooperation and
are already involved in selecting sutras and equipment for the memorial
service and treasures for loan to the exhibitions. Manabe Shunsho,
Director of Kanazawa Bunko near Yokohama, who has been a member of our
research team since 1993, has pledged the full cooperation of the Bunko
which houses many relevant documents and a statue of the Abbess Mugai which
he will send to us.
The conference
is the culmination of almost a decade of work by the Institute to open
up what has been one of the most astonishingly neglected areas of research
in Japanese religious and cultural history -- the vital role played by
religious women and nuns in the introduction and spread of Buddhism in
Japan, as institution builders and patrons, and in the founding of major
networks of convents to which present-day Imperial Buddhist Convents trace
back their roots. To date the history of Japanese Buddhism has been written
based exclusively on the writing of Japanese monks and on the study of
the archives of male monastic institutions. The entire other half of religious
history -- that of ecclesiastical women -- has been our challenge.
We began in
December of 1989 with a shoe-string conference in New York, the "Workshop
for Women and Buddhism in Pre-modern Japan: Research Strategies for a Newly
Developing Field." It was a small beginning, made possible by the cooperation
of a new, enthusiastic group of scholars in Japan, the Kenkyukai: Josei to Bukkyo. The network has since grown, resulting in numerous
publications both in Japan and abroad; a two-volume set of research chapters
in English is in the hands of a publisher now. But the great breakthrough
came when, due to our research efforts concerning Abbess Mugai Nyodai,
the Imperial Convents in Kyoto who consider her their spiritual founder,
opened their heretofore tightly-closed doors to one or two of us. And eventually
the Imperial Convent Survey Project became a reality.
There is much
to be covered during the three-day weekend. The list of outstanding research
paper topics for the conference offered for our selection is already a
rich one. To date we have received requests to participate from more than
62 scholars from Japan, Europe, and the United States. During the coming
year we will select carefully the most promising and seminal research papers
most appropriate for post-conference publication and will devise open panels
and discussion circles for others to assure accommodations for as many
scholars and students as possible who are actively involved in the development
of this new field.
Our objectives
are multiple, and more important, they are achievable. Our goals are to
increase in quantum dimensions the research being conducted on convents;
to contribute to the increase in publications on the role of abbesses and
nuns in all disciplines (history, art, religion, and literature); to impact
effectively the current academic curriculum, so as to add a full measure
of primary sources from historical materials that document the beliefs
and practices of religious women; and to strengthen the delicate but vital
threads that now link scholars and the object of their study: i.e., the
university researcher to the convent-residing nun and her preserve.
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FULL PROGRAM
Commemorating
the 30th Anniversary
of its founding
in 1968
the Institute
for Medieval Japanese Studies
presents
The 700th Anniversary Memorial
Service and International Symposium on
"The Culture of Convents
in Japanese History"
in honor of
ABBESS MUGAI NYODAI
(born 1223;
died Nov. 28, 1298)
Disciple and spiritual
heir of the Chinese Rinzai Zen monk Wu-hsueh Tsu-yuan (known in Japan as
Mugaku Sogen
Bukko Kokushi]);
founding Abbess of Keiaiji Convent temple complex of the Five Mountain
Rinzai Zen Convent Association; and spiritual matriarch of many of the
remaining monzeki convents today.
November 21-23,
1998 (Heisei 10 nen)
Columbia University,
New York City, USA
Events will include:
Memorial Service:
The reading of sutras;
the offering of incense and tea; memorial ceremonies conducted by nuns
and monks related to Abbess Mugai Nyodai’s lineage and joined by others
wishing to honor her; musical offerings of vocal and instrumental music
including that from medieval Latin West convents of the same era as Abbess
Mugai Nyodai.
St. Paul’s Chapel,
Columbia University
117th Street &
Amsterdam Avenue
Exhibitions:
"Treasures from
the Imperial Buddhist
Convents of Kyoto"
(C.V. Starr East
Asian Library, Kent Hall)
Calligraphy, ritual
objects, never-before-exhibited portraits of abbesses, and furnishings
of their daily life, including books, games, and utensils created over
the centuries by the nuns themselves as well as other works related to
the lives of Japanese Buddhist nuns. Exact replica of thirteenth century
chinso portrait statue of Abbess Mugai Nyodai enshrined in
the Hojiin Convent and designated an "Important Cultural Treasure"
(from the Kanazawa Bunko Collection).
|
"Columbia University
Buddhist Sculpture"
(Low Library Rotunda
Gallery)
International
Symposium/Conference
"The Culture of Convents
in Japanese History"
[both English
and Japanese will be used with simultaneous interpretation]
-
Anne LAZROVE, "Becoming
One of the Guys: Mugai Nyodai and the Bukko Lineage Faction"
-
TOKUDA Kazuo, "Chiyono
Monogatari and Mugai Nyodai’s Legend and Biography"
-
USHIYAMA Yoshiyuki, "Various
Forms of Medieval Convents"
-
MIKOSHIBA Daisuke, "The
Founding of State Convents"
-
MATSUO Kenji, "The Monk
Eizon’s Thirteenth-century Religious Order and Medieval Nuns and Nunneries"
-
MANABE Shunsho,
"Objects and Documents from the Sutra Mound buried on Mt. Koya by
the Nun Hoyaku in 1113"
-
Edward KAMENS, "When a
Woman Becomes a Nun: Commemorations and Representations in Poetry and Prose"
-
KAWAHIRA Hitoshi, "Medieval
Japanese Waka Poems and Zen Nuns: Nishihachijo Zenni and Koshibe
Zenni"
-
OHKI Sadako, "Tradition
and Transformation: A Case Study of waka on shikishi and
tanzaku Preserved at an Imperial Convent"
-
Matthew McKELWAY, "The
Representation of Nunneries in Rakuchu Rakugai zu screen paintings"
-
ENDO Hajime, "Ryomo-ni,
the Nun Depicted in Ekeizu Lineage Paintings Who Was the Head of the Shinshu
Temple Bukkoji"
-
Maribeth GRAYBILL, "An
Exploration of the Meaning of Buddhist Nuns’ Portrait Paintings (chinso-e)"
-
NISHIGUCHI Junko, "Report
on the Documentary and Oral History Research Surveys of Hokyoji
Convent"
-
OKA Yoshiko, "The Convent
Revival Movement in Late Medieval and Early Modern Japan: An Analysis of
Documents From the Dodo Bunko Archives at Hokyoji Convent"
-
KOMINE Kazuaki, "The Myoho
Tenjinkyo Sutra in the Collection of Hokyoji"
-
Katja TRIPLETT, "The History
of the Kosho-in Monzeki Convent, a Neighboring Temple to Hokyo-ji"
-
Barbara RUCH, "Nuns and
Convents in Japanese History: Toward a Re-examination of University Curricula
and New Research Directions"
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Other
Participants and/or Paper Givers:
(as of December
1997)
Hank
GLASSMAN
KATSUURA Noriko
Ryuichi ABE
Barbara FORD
Robert THURMAN
William BODIFORD
Patricia FISTER
YOSHIDA Kazuhiko
Simone HEIDEGGER
Duncan WILLIAMS |
MAYEDA
Noriko
MAYEDA Sengaku
MAKINO Hiroko
Peter HASKEL
Paula ARAI
Bernard FAURE
Royall TYLER
Elizabeth LILLEHOJ
Joan PIGGOTT
Gratia WILLIAMS |
Paul GRONER
Mary Martin McLAUGHLIN
Mimi YIENGPRUKSAWAN
Nicole FABRICAND-PERSON
Round tables and discussion
sessions will be planned to accommodate non-paper givers wishing to participate
actively.
Other Honored Guests
&
Cooperating Institutions:
-
The abbesses and nuns
from the Kyoto Imperial Convents:
Daishoji monzeki
Donkein monzeki
Hojin monzeki
Hokyoji
monzeki
Koshoin
monzeki
Rinkyuji monzeki
Reikanji monzeki
Sanjichonji monzeki
-
Tofukuji Monastery:
Chief Abbot FUKUSHIMA
Keido
-
Kanazawa Bunko:
MANABE Shunsho
(Director)
|
Gyokukan Zenshi
(Daishoji monzeki)
Organizing Committee:
Barbara RUCH
Professor of Japanese
Literature and Culture Columbia University
Director
Institute for Medieval
Japanese Studies
Sadako OHKI
Associate Director,
Research Archives
Institute for Medieval
Japanese Studies
Tammy ALLEN
Associate Director,
Administration
Institute for Medieval
Japanese Studies
Maribeth GRAYBILL
Associate Professor
of Art History
Swarthmore College
Anne LAZROVE
Buddhist Studies
Yale University
Amy HEINRICH
Director, C.V. Starr
East Asian Library
Columbia University
Sarah WEINER
Director, Office of
Art Properties
Columbia University
Barbara FORD
Curator
Metropolitan Museum
of Art
Exhibition Curators:
Maribeth GRAYBILL
Sadako Ohki
Manabe Shunsho
David Sensabaugh
|
REGISTRATION
FORM
International
Symposium/Conference
"The Culture
of Convents in Japanese History"
Saturday - Monday,
November 21-23, 1998
Family Name: ________________
Given Name: _______________
Affiliation:
______________________________________________
Mailing Address: _________________________________________
________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
Home Phone: ________________
Work Phone: ________________
Fax: ________________
Email: ___________________________
Area(s) of interest
relevant to the Conference: ____________________
________________________________________________________
Check one or more
below concerning your willingness to participate in or assist with
the conference:
paper-giver ________________
attendee only ________________
discussant ________________
session chair ________________
local guide for
Japanese-speaking
participants ________________
other (tell us) ________________
Those who have
already registered and those who register now will later receive updated
information about
local arrangements and schedules. New registrants are urged to obtain
funding from their
own institutions. All Institute funding has now been committed.
Please return
this form by email, fax or mail to the Institute.
|
NEWS ABOUT READERS’ WORK
(SEND US YOURS!)
Professor Paul
B. Watt’s article on "Women and Asceticism in
the Japanese Tradition" has appeared in the Union Seminary Quarterly
Review, 48:3-4 (1994), 93-103. He has also given papers at recent conferences
on "The Place of Women in Early Japanese Buddhism: The Legacy of the Pre-Buddhist
Period," and "Shamans, Rulers and Nuns: Power and Women in Early Japan."
Professor Watt can be contacted at the Department of Religious Studies,
DePauw University, Greencastle, Indiana 46135-0037<pwatt@Depauw.Edu>.
Professor Paula
Arai’s book, Women Living Zen: Japanese Soto Buddhist
Nuns will appear in November 1998 from Oxford University Press. Professor
Arai can be contacted at the Religious Studies Department, Vanderbilt University,
301-D Garland Hall, Nashville, TN 37235 <araipk@ctrvax.Vanderbilt.Edu>.
|
|
In gratitude for
receipt of the
Leonard C. Holvik
Traditional Japanese Music
Collection
(Japanese instruments,
scores, books, audio and
video tapes, and
manuscripts)
The Institute
for Medieval Japanese Studies
will hold a
CELEBRATION
OF
THE LIFE AND MUSIC OF
LEONARD C. HOLVIK
(1918 - 1996)
Professor Emeritus
of Music and Choral Director
Earlham College,
Richmond, Indiana
and
Teacher and Composer
Traditional Japanese
Music
at
Columbia University,
New York City
Friday, February
27, 1998
All are welcome. Intention
to attend can be sent to: medievaljapan@columbia.edu
or to fax no. (212) 678-8629. It would be helpful to us to estimate space,
seating and food if we could hear from you.
|
|
Commemoration:
St. Paul’s Chapel
Columbia University
117th Street &
Amsterdam Avenue
4:00 - 5:30 pm
*Offerings of
Words and Music
|
|
Reception:
Gabe M. Weiner
Music & Arts Library
Columbia University,
Dodge Hall, 7th Floor
116th Street &
Broadway
5:30 - 7:00 pm
*Exhibition of
selected items from the Collection
*Instrumental
demonstrations
on the koto
and shakuhachi
|
|
The Japanese musical
instruments, scores, audio
and video
tapes, records, books and other
materials
received from the estate of Professor
Holvik will
be used to develop a curriculum in
Japanese
music both historically and in performance.
|
|
The Institute
for Medieval Japanese Studies
will host an informal
workshop on
SHINTO STUDIES IN THE WEST:
Toward a Re-examination of
University Curricula and
Future Research Directions
March 5-6, 1998
403 Kent Hall
Columbia University
New York City
Opening
Session:
Thursday, March
5, 1998
7:30 pm
Illustrated Lecture
(in Japanese) by
Manabe Shunsho,
Director
The Kanagawa kenritsu
Kanazawa Bunko
"Kanazawa Bunko
no Mikkyo to
Chusei Shinto
Shiryo"
Workshop:
(in English)
Friday, March
6, 1998
10:00 am - 5:00
pm
Except for the keynote
presentation by Professor Manabe, there will be no formal papers, but participants
are free to prepare oral presentations on issues related to the theme of
the workshop so that we may discuss them fully. It is hoped that the workshop
will review the state of the field and will bring to the fore the problems
that now hinder advancement of this field. Some areas for discussion will
include the political and strategic difficulties of doing research in Japan
on Shinto; women and Shinto in pre-modern Japan; Shinto and the Japanese
literary canon; art historical problems; anthropological problems; and
theoretical conflicts in Western academia. We hope to be able to make recommendations
for future research projects and set up a network for the exchange of information
and support. Graduate students too are warmly welcomed.
Funding is not available
for participants’ transportation or lodging except for those who will definitely
be making a presentation.
|
REGISTRATION FORM
Shinto Workshop
March 5-6,
1998
Although it will not
commit you in any way, it would help us if prospective participants would
kindly register so we may accurately estimate space requirements. Last
minute attendance of course is possible. All those who register to attend
will receive updated and more detailed information in February.
Please complete the
blanks below and return this form to the Institute by email,
fax or mail.
Name: ________________________________
Affiliation and Status:
______________________
_______________________________________
_______________________________________
Address: _______________________________
Phone: _________________________________
Fax: _________________________________
Email: _________________________________
Check here if you
would like to attend: ___________
Check here if you
would like to make a
presentation or lead
a discussion (indicate topic): _____
___________________________________________
___________________________________________
Indicate the specific
area in which your main
interest in Shinto
lies: _______________________
________________________________________
________________________________________
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|
Report on the August 28-30,
1997
Dodo gosho Survey
By Sadako Ohki
|
In Memorium:
We were deeply saddened
by the recent sudden death of Professor ISHIKAWA Rikizan (Komazawa University)
on August 4, 1997. I personally remember how he made a strong impression
on me last year when I met him in Kyoto; he was the first scholar I met
while we were waiting for others to arrive. He was easy to converse with
despite our having just met. Upon speaking with several scholars in Japan
and in the United States, I realized the compelling impact he had made,
especially on young graduate students and scholars who had received his
guidance and encouragement in the course of their studies on Buddhism,
particularly in connection with women's involvement in Buddhism. The students
have lost a much respected mentor with Prof. Ishikawa’s premature death.
He was greatly missed at our last session in August. (The Institute for
Medieval Japanese Studies will hold a special session in honor of Professor
Ishikawa in conjunction with the conference on "The Culture of Convents
in Japanese History" to be held in November 1998. See details elsewhere
in this issue of the newsletter.)
New Members:
Two new members
joined the survey this past summer, both of whom are also new Research
Associates of the Institute for Medieval Japanese Studies. They are FUKUDA
Chizuru, a member of the research staff at the National Institute of Japanese
History, and MAKINO Hiroko, Assistant Professor at Kanto Gakuin Women’s
College. I met Ms. Fukuda in the spring of 1997 when she briefly came to
the Institute here at Columbia while she was a visiting scholar at Harvard.
Though young, she is a veteran staff member at the Institute. Her ability
to decipher handwritten komonjo documents at a glance without hesitation
will be invaluable to our survey efforts. The survey team was impressed
by her professional training, not only in the skill of reading texts but
also in the matter of document preservation which largely had been overlooked
before she joined us.
Professor Makino
is a specialist in the history of daily life of the pre-modern period.
During the convent survey we were surprised to find her taking photographs
of every meal before she began eating. She said that she has been taking
such photographs for her research for many years. Her teacher was the late
TANIGUCHI Yoko who was the author of the book, Daishoji
Hikae (1992), which provides a wealth of inside information on the
Daishoji convent. Professor Makino served as research assistant on
that book and she has continued to assist the Abbess of Daishoji
in the reading of documents in their archives. Trust between scholars and
convents is difficult to build, and her relationship with Daishoji
contributes immensely to the work of our Imperial convent survey team.
List of Survey
Documents:
In our last
issue, we published a preliminary list of survey documents compiled by
scholars at Hokyoji, and I suspect that many of you are looking
forward to seeing another list. It has seemed advisable, however, to coordinate
all of our lists at one time, and so we hope we will have a preliminary
list of all the Hokyoji survey results ready by the time of
the 700th Anniversary of the death of Abbess Mugai Nyodai (1223-1298) and
the International Conference on "The Culture of Convents in Japanese History"
to be held in New York November 21-23, 1998. Please see the Announcement
and Full Program regarding the memorial service/symposium/exhibition elsewhere
in this issue. Several scholars who have been participating in the survey
at Hokyoji in Kyoto will make reports at that symposium. Please
mark your calendar for next year; we hope you will be able to attend.
Brief Report
on Archival Surveys
(August &
December 1996):
Although we
cannot publish the entire list of surveyed documents at this time, I would
like to introduce briefly the contents of Box Five and Box Six which were
surveyed in August and December of 1996, respectively. I attended the August
1996 and August 1997 surveys but was unable to attend the December 1996
survey. The preliminary list of the most recent survey conducted in August
1997 is not yet available. Such is the scale of the survey that each participant
was busy deciphering what he or she was allocated to read and catalogue,
and thus we were unable to gain an overview of all the materials. The following,
therefore, is only a fraction of the list and by no means represents the
entire contents.
The oldest document
surveyed in August 1996, an incomplete order for a land tax, dated from
1409 (Oei 16). A series of similar land tax documents recorded during
the eighth month of 1491 was also surveyed. Further, about a dozen dated
documents from the sixteenth century, ranging from 1505 to 1576, some of
which were written by officials (Bugyo) of the Muromachi Bakufu,
were found. One of the bundles in Box Five contained a substantial group
of documents dating from 1813 to 1870 which appear to be IOUs. Without
examining the details further, we cannot be certain, but the nunnery seems
to have conducted a money-lending business at that time. Other miscellaneous
documents included lists of gifts received, some of which were lists of
presents received by Kin no Miya, the last abbess from the Imperial family
to have become a nun at Hokyoji in the early nineteenth century,
just before the Meiji Restoration. Box Five was largely comprised of account
books dated from 1809 to 1827.
Box Six was
examined by five scholars in December of 1996. The oldest dated document
was a copy of an original handwritten letter dated 1585 with Vermilion
Seal (shuinjo; official letter by the Shogun) issued by Toyotomi
Hideyoshi to Yorin'an, a sub-nunnery of Hokyoji which
may have been a place of retirement for elderly abbesses. Another handwritten
copy made from an original letter, with Black Seal (kokuinjo;
official letter by a Daimyo), issued to Yorin'an by Tokugawa
Ieyasu in 1615 was also found. In addition, two other handwritten copies
made from original letters bearing Vermilion Seals issued to Yorin'an
are preserved; one was issued by the Shoguns Tokugawa Ietsuna in 1665 and
the other by Tsunayoshi in 1685. In the middle of the seventeenth century
contention seems to have developed between the main nunnery and branch
nunneries, as revealed by dispute papers (sosho) dated 1647
and 1652.
Small Discoveries:
Little has been
written on nuns and their lives, so even small discoveries during our survey
are quite significant. One such finding was the uniformity of names of
the tonsured nuns at each imperial convent, traceable at least to the seventeenth
century. By maintaining a specific, inherited Chinese character for their
lineage, the convents demonstrated their continued succession visibly in
writing and audibly in voicing their names. Daishoji, for example,
used the character ei (infinite), as in Eiso Joo (1609-90),
Eio Joo (1702-54), and Eijun Joo (1820-30). (The title
Joo was given to daughters of Emperors who did not receive
the rank of princess.) Hokyoji passed down the character ri
(reason), as in Risho Joo (1631-56); Richu Joo
(1641-89); Riho Joo (1672-1745); Hongakuin no miya, a daughter
of Emperor Gosai); and Rikin Joo (Kin no miya) who frequently appears
in the list of gifts sent by her father Emperor Kokaku (1771-1840).
Throughout our
survey of handwritten documents, the name Ikeda Kenmotsu appeared frequently.
He seems to have been an able keishi, an administrator, in charge
of accounts and other household business of Hokyoji convent
in the mid-eighteenth century. Many documents concerning land, tax, and
hired hands (kosakunin) bear his name. The inventory records of
land, paddy fields, and dry fields owned by members of the Imperial family
associated with Dodogosho (Hokyoji), which I personally handled
in August 1997, typically had names such as "[name of a nunnery or temple]-ji
Miyasama Goryo Tahata On’aratamecho" [Surveying record of the
dry and wet lands owned by the Imperial family member of such-and-such
temple/convent], or a similar name like "Tahata Goginmi aratamecho"
[Close census and survey record of dry and wet lands]. By assessing these
documents and other
reference materials, scholars who have participated in the past surveys
have discussed the general background of the convents of the seventeenth
and eighteenth centuries. We know for certain that at the time of Emperor
Gomino-o (1596-1680), many of his daughters entered convents as abbesses
and either established or re-established convents. This development continued
through the time of the Genroku era (1688-1704) but began declining shortly
thereafter. Around the time of the Horeki era (1751-64), the convents
seem to have revitalized. At that time, stewards and accountants, represented
by a man like Ikeda Kenmotsu, appear in documents as integral members of
the convent community who worked to ensure no lands were idle and that
sub-nunneries in remote lands were built to secure convents’ ties to various
areas. Their work helped finance and maintain the convents. Emperor Kokaku
(r. 1779-1817) is remembered by the nuns as the last emperor whose reign
contributed to the fostering of convent culture before the Meiji Restoration.
Oral History
Interviews (Kikitori Chosa):
Survey team
members conducted surveys on August 31, 1996 and December 24, 1996. During
both interviews the head Abbess Sawada Eisai at Hokyoji was
the major interviewee. At the Institute we have retained a Japanese transcription
and an English translation of both interviews, although they yet need to
be verified with the interviewee; if you are interested in reading them,
please contact us. The transcript of the first interview was compiled and
summarized by Professor Nishiguchi, based on handwritten notes and a tape
recording of the oral interview conducted by four scholars (Professors
Nishiguchi, Katsuura, Oka, and myself). The second transcript is better
organized, in a question and answer format. Professors Nishiguchi, Katsuura,
and Oka conducted the interview. Their consistent enthusiasm for this oral
history project has helped develop invaluable results.
The second interview
was designed to supplement the first one, and the basic structure of both
interviews can be divided into two sections: activities at the convent
and the personal history of the head abbess. The activities center upon
dedicatory religious services involving the reading of sutras, reciting
dharani, and the offering of food to the founder of Hokyoji
convent (Karin no miya Egon Zen’ni of the fourteenth century), as well
as in front of the main object of worship at Hokyoji (Shokannon),
and in front of the ihai (mortuary tablets) of successive abbesses
of the nunnery, and symbolically to the whole religious community of the
convent. The main sutras that the nuns of Hokyoji recite are
Hannya shingyo (Heart Sutra), Shosaishu (to eliminate
calamities and disasters), Daihishu (a dharani), and Kongokyo
(Vajracchedika prajnaparamita-sutra). The abbess, who is now 86 years old
and who has spent most of her youth and adult life at the convent, recounts
many changes in her life. It is an inspiration to hear from this diminutive
woman (she is barely four feet tall) that she knows how to be content in
whatever situation she might be in, whether in war without food or in a
peaceful era. Through the interviews we have learned that at one point
eleven nuns were members of the convent; now there are only three.
Future Organization:
A meeting was
held at Hokyoji on August 29, 1997 among eight participants:
Professors Nishiguchi, Fukuda, Katsuura, Komine, Makino, Manabe, Oka, and
Ohki. Professor Nishiguchi called the meeting to examine the structure
of our survey team, our budget, and our future prospective and schedule.
Among several decisions, we determined that although we must mutually cooperate
and communicate, the group will divide into three disciplinary teams of
Literature, History, and Art. Each division will hold responsibility for
choosing its survey contents, recruiting new members, fundraising, budget
allocation, and executing its plans. Oral interviews will be incorporated
into the History division. We will continue to seek the support of the
National Institute of Japanese Literature, the National Institute of Japanese
History, and the Institute for Medieval Japanese Studies, but each scholar
will also seek funding from her or his own institution as well as from
other private and public support in order to continue the survey beyond
Hokyoji.
Upcoming Activities:
No further surveys
were conducted in 1997 except for preliminary studies and contacts that
may lead to future surveys. The microfilm photo session of diaries at Hokyoji
was completed in August 1997; what remains to be done at Hokyoji
is a photo session of the books and komonjo documents and a survey
of the art works. We plan to conduct a photo session of the literary books
preserved at Hokyoji in August 1998.
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KANAclassics
Since 1996, under the
leadership of an Institute Research Associate, Professor Xiao-Jie Yang
of the University of Calgary, the Institute has offered workshops in conjunction
with the annual AAS meetings on "Reading Classical Japanese Handwritten
Documents." Dr. Sadako Ohki, Institute Associate Director for Research,
has been testing Professor Yang’s CD-ROM "KANAclassics," which is designed
to teach students, scholars and curators to read medieval handwriting.
A textbook to accompany the CD-ROM is being developed by Dr. Ohki, a calligraphy
specialist, together with Professor Yang and Professor Sonja Arntzen of
the University of Alberta. The set should be available by next academic
year. It will be demonstrated again at the art historians meeting (JAHF)
of the AAS conference in Washington, D.C. in March and again in June at
the International Convention of Asian Scholars in Leiden.
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Columbia University
Internships
1997-98
In September 1997
the Institute began a program of internships, based on the well-known model
of industry and corporate internships where selected Columbia students
gain hands-on training and experience in organizing and running projects
related to their area of specialization under the guidance of professional
administrators and specialists. The 1997-98 interns are:
LORI MEEKS
Pre-modern Japanese
Art & Culture
Exhibition Development
TOMOKO SUGAHARA
Shintoism Workshops
& Lectures
JAYNE KIM
Buddhism-related
Projects & Symposia
MEGUMI SHIBATA
Traditional Japanese
Music
Archive &
Recital Development
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Letter in Mugai
Nyodai's Hand
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