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Competing Rituals: The New Year’s Assembly versus the Misai-e Assembly Competing Rituals: The New Year’s Assembly versus the Misai-e Assembly
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The Ritual Program of the New Year’s Assembly and Its Purpose The Ritual Program of the New Year’s Assembly and Its Purpose
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Ritual Conflicts and Complications Ritual Conflicts and Complications
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Fujiwara Tadazane: Failed Performance, Failed Authority Fujiwara Tadazane: Failed Performance, Failed Authority
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Retired Emperor Shirakawa: Mastery of Risk and Performance Authority Retired Emperor Shirakawa: Mastery of Risk and Performance Authority
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Five When Rites Go Wrong: Ritual and Political Conflict
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Published:March 2015
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Abstract
During the late Heian period (late eleventh and twelfth centuries), the retired emperor held the New Year’s Assembly (Shusho-e) concurrently with the emperor’s Misai-e Assembly. This was but one of many instances in this period where the rituals of the emperor and the retired emperor generated a conflict in scheduling, with the usual result that the former lost participants to the latter. In addition, the Fujiwara regent was also holding a New Year’s Assembly at the same time and failing to gather enough participants. While the Fujiwara regent’s infelicitous performance was closely connected with his vulnerable social and political standing, the schedule conflicts between the Buddhist rituals sponsored by the emperor and the retired emperor do not simply reflect the rivalry between two competing powers. Rather, they expose the seemingly paradoxical nature of shared rulership between the emperor and the retired emperor, which was simultaneously competitive and conciliatory.
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