'Motoori Norinaga' (Japanese: 本居宣長; 21 June
1730–5 November
1801) was a Japanese scholar of
Kokugaku during the
Edo period. He is probably the best known and most prominent of all scholars in this tradition.
Life
Norinaga was born in Matsuzaka of the province of
Ise (now
Matsuzaka City in
Mie prefecture). He was the second son of the Ozu merchant house of Matsuzaka (the film director
YasujirŠOzu was a descendant of the same line). After his elder brother’s death, Norinaga succeeded to the Ozu line. At one stage he was adopted out to a paper-making family but the bookish boy was not suited to business.
It was at his mother's suggestion that, at the age of 22, Norinaga went to
Kyoto to study medicine. In Kyoto, he also studied Chinese and Japanese philology under the
neo-Confucianist Hori Keizan. It was at this time that Norinaga became interested in the Japanese classics and decided to enter the field of
Kokugaku under the influence of
Ogyū Sorai and
Keichū. (With changes in the language, the ancient classics were already poorly understood by Japanese in the Edo period and texts needed philological analysis in order to be properly understood.) Life in Kyoto also instilled in the young Norinaga a love of traditional Japanese court culture.
Returning to Matsuzaka, Norinaga opened a medical practice for infants while devoting his spare time to lectures on the ''
Tale of Genji'' and studies of the ''
Nihon Shoki'' (''Chronicles of Japan''). At the age of 27, he bought several books by
Kamo no Mabuchi and embarked on his Kokugaku researches. As a doctor, he adopted the name of one of his samurai ancestors, Motoori.
In 1763, Norinaga met Mabuchi in person when the latter visited Matsuzaka, a meeting that has come down in history as ‘the night in Matsuzaka’. Norinaga took the occasion to ask Mabuchi to supervise his annotations of the ''
Kojiki'' (''Records of Ancient Matters''). Mabuchi suggested that Norinaga should first tackle the annotations to the ''
Man'yÅshÅ«'' in order to accustom himself to the ancient
kana usage known as the ''
man'yÅgana''. This was the only meeting between the two men, but they continued to correspond and, with Mabuchi’s encouragement, Norinaga later went on to full-fledged research into the ''Kojiki''.
Norinaga’s disciples included Ishizuka Tatsumaro, Natsume Mikamaro, Takahashi Mikiakira and Motoori Haruniwa (Norinaga’s son).
Although overshadowed by his activities as a Kokugaku scholar, Norinaga spent 40 years as a practising doctor in Matsuzaka and was seeing patients until 10 days before his death in 1801.
Works
Norinaga’s most important works include the ''Kojiki-den'' (''Commentaries on the Kojiki''), made over a period of around 35 years, and his annotations on the ''Tale of Genji''. Norinaga took the view that the heritage of ancient Japan was one of natural spontaneity in feelings and spirit, and that imported Confucianism ran counter to such natural feelings. He criticised Ogyu Sorai for his worship of Chinese civilisation and thought, although it has been pointed out that his
philological methodology was heavily influenced by Sorai's. His ideas also appear to be heavily influenced by the Chinese intellectual
Wang Yangming (ÅŒ YÅmei in Japanese), who had argued for ''innate knowing'', that mankind had a naturally intuitive (as opposed to rational) ability to distinguish good and evil.
Hitherto scholars of ancient literature had shown a preference for the grandness and masculinity of ''Man'yÅshÅ«'' poetry and an aversion to works like the ''Tale of Genji'', which were regarded as unmanly and feminine. Norinaga resurrected the position of the ''Tale of Genji'', which he regarded as an expression of
mono no aware, a particular Japanese sensibility of "sorrow at evanescence" that Norinaga claimed forms the essence of Japanese literature.
In undertaking his textual analysis of ancient Japanese, Norinaga also made vital contributions to establishing a native Japanese grammatical tradition, in particular the analysis of
clitics,
particles and auxiliary verbs.
Timeline
★ 1730 - Born as second son
★ Education:
★
★ At the age of seven could already read and write
★
★ 11 years old reciting
Noh theatre pieces and
Confucian classics
★
★ 13y. visiting the shrine of
Yoshino
★
★ 16y. archery
★
★ 18y.
Japanese tea ceremony
★
★ 19y. advanced Confucian training
★ 1748 - Norinaga is adopted by the Imaida family, reversed after only 2 years.
★ 1751 - His stepbrother dies.
★ 1752 - Goes to
Kyoto to study medical science
★ 1752-57 - Some scholars note his productivity. Motoori produces 2000
Waka and 40 books and copies 15 others.
★ 1757 - Reads
Kamo no Mabuchi's first book, ''Kanji kÅ''. Lacking money he returns to his hometown to open a medical practice.
★ 1760 - Enters arranged marriage with Murata Mika, divorced after 3 months.
★ 1762 - Marries Kusubuka Tami and one year later their son Haruniwa is born.
★ 1763 - Meets
Kamo no Mabuchi who tells him to read the ''
Nihonshoki'' and the ''
Man'yÅshÅ«''
★ 1764-71 - Studies the ''
Kojiki'', and begins to spread his teachings.
★ 1801 - Dies.
See also
★
Kokugaku
★
Kojiki
★
Japanese poetry
★
Japanese nationalism