Workshop: Ganmon Liturgies in Premodern East Asia

Friday, 12 October 2018 4:30 PM - Saturday, 13 October 2018 5:30 PM EST

1140 Amsterdam Avenue, New York, NY, 10027, United States

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Friday, 12 October 2018 4:30 PM - Saturday, 13 October 2018 5:30 PM EST

Room 403, Kent Hall, 1140 Amsterdam Avenue, New York, NY, 10027, United States.

Composed by specially trained practitioners (often university-trained scholars) and couched in elaborate Chinese-style parallel prose, ganmon ??were read out loud at religious services (primarily Buddhist in orientation, although there are ganmon addressing non-Buddhist deities). Because they explain the motivations of the sponsors of temples and pagodas, Buddhist images and sutra copies, and also rituals related to funerals, births, illnesses, and so on, they provide important information about the sociality of premodern elites. Although they fall outside the modern Japanese literary canon, they were one of the most prestigious genres of Heian period (27 examples are collected in the mid-11th century Honcho monzui anthology), and as texts intended to be orally intoned they raise crucial questions about reading practices and intersections of vernacular (Japanese) and cosmopolitan (literary Chinese) registers. This international workshop will gather scholars of language, history, religion, and literature working on Japanese ganmon and their Chinese, Korean, and Vietnamese antecedents/ counterparts to discuss the significance of this understudied but crucial premodern genre.

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If you can no longer attend, please let us know so that we can open up a seat for someone else. Thank you for your cooperation.

Yoshiko Niiya

keenecenter.org

Since 1986, the Donald Keene Center has provided free programs dedicated to introducing Japanese culture, in all its depth and diversity, to new audiences. Combining public outreach with interdisciplinary scholarship, the Center seeks not only to inform but also to inspire. As we celebrate our thirtieth anniversary, we look forward to your continued patronage and generous support in helping future generations to experience the richness of cultural discovery.

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