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The Authenticity of Sendai Kuji Hongi
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This reexamination of Sendai kuji hongi (Kujiki) convincingly leads the reader to new conclusions on its place within the history and historiography of early Japan. While the Sendai kuji hongi is g...
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29 May 2006

This reexamination of Sendai kuji hongi (Kujiki) convincingly leads the reader to new conclusions on its place within the history and historiography of early Japan. While the Sendai kuji hongi is generally considered as simply derivative, drawing on Kojiki, Nihon shoki, and Kogo shūi, John Bentley's careful textual analysis demonstrates that the work has actually drawn from drafts of Kojiki and Nihon shoki, but not Kogo shūi, which has quoted from Kujiki. Thus the work can not be seen as a product of the early Heian era, but must date from the early Nara era. It therewith offers a new look not only into Japanese early Japanese historiography, but also provides a window to a variant view of the Japanese imperial lineage.
The first three chapters consist of an analysis of the text from a textual analytical and linguistic viewpoint. Sections only found in Kujiki are then examined and analyzed. With full translation of the ten books of Kujiki, and amply annotated text.
The first three chapters consist of an analysis of the text from a textual analytical and linguistic viewpoint. Sections only found in Kujiki are then examined and analyzed. With full translation of the ten books of Kujiki, and amply annotated text.
Price: $224.00
Pages: 428
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Brill's Japanese Studies Library
Publication Date:
29 May 2006
ISBN: 9789004152250
Format: Hardcover
John R. Bentley, Ph.D. (1999) in Japanese linguistics, University of Hawaii, is Associate Professor of Japanese at Northern Illinois University. He has published on Japanese and Korean linguistics, including A Descriptive Grammar of Early Old Japanese (Brill, 2001), and on Japanese historiography.