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Kokugaku
Kokugaku
from Wikipedia

Kokugaku (国学; Japanese pronunciation: [ko.kɯ.ɡa.kɯ, -ŋa.kɯ],[1] lit.'national study') was an academic movement, a school of Japanese philology and philosophy originating during the Edo period. Kokugaku scholars worked to refocus Japanese scholarship away from the then-dominant study of Chinese, Confucian, and Buddhist texts in favor of research into the early Japanese classics.[2]

History

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Tanimori Yoshiomi (1818 - 1911), a kokugaku scholar.

What later became known as the kokugaku tradition began in the 17th and 18th centuries as kogaku ("ancient studies"), wagaku ("Japanese studies") or inishie manabi ("antiquity studies"), a term favored by Motoori Norinaga and his school. Drawing heavily from Shinto and Japan's ancient literature, the school looked back to a golden age of culture and society. They drew upon ancient Japanese poetry, predating the rise of medieval Japan's feudal orders in the mid-twelfth century, and other cultural achievements to show the emotion of Japan. One famous emotion appealed to by the kokugakusha is 'mono no aware'.

The word kokugaku, coined to distinguish this school from kangaku ("Chinese studies"), was popularized by Hirata Atsutane in the 19th century. It has been translated as 'Native Studies' and represented a response to Sinocentric Neo-Confucian theories. Kokugaku scholars criticized the repressive moralizing of Confucian thinkers, and tried to re-establish Japanese culture before the influx of foreign modes of thought and behaviour.

Eventually, the thinking of kokugaku scholars influenced the sonnō jōi philosophy and movement. It was this philosophy, amongst other things, that led to the eventual collapse of the Tokugawa shogunate in 1868 and the subsequent Meiji Restoration.

Tenets

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The kokugaku school held that the Japanese national character was naturally pure, and would reveal its inherent splendor once the foreign (Chinese) influences were removed. The "Chinese heart" was considered different from the "true heart" or "Japanese Heart". This true Japanese spirit needed to be revealed by removing a thousand years of Chinese learning.[3] It thus took an interest in philologically identifying the ancient, indigenous meanings of ancient Japanese texts; in turn, these ideas were synthesized with early Shinto and astronomy.[4]

Influence

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The term kokugaku was used liberally by early modern Japanese to refer to the "national learning" of each of the world's nations. This usage was adopted into Chinese, where it is still in use today (Chinese: 國學/国学, romanizedguóxué).[5] The Chinese also adopted the kokugaku term "national essence" (Japanese: 国粹, romanizedkokusui, Chinese: 國粹/国粹, romanizedguócuì).[6]

According to scholar of religion Jason Ānanda Josephson, kokugaku played a role in the consolidation of State Shinto in the Meiji era. It promoted a unified, scientifically grounded and politically powerful vision of Shinto against Buddhism, Christianity, and Japanese folk religions, many of which were named "superstitions."[7]

Notable kokugaku scholars

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See also

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  • Guido von List, European analogue advocating a similar revival of prehistoric religion
  • Haibutsu kishaku
  • Ishihara Shiko'o
  • Magokoro, a fundamental concept of kokugaku
  • Mitogaku, a philosophy ideologically related to kokugaku
  • Shinbutsu bunri
  • Soga–Mononobe conflict, the juncture at which Buddhism supplanted Shinto as the religious foundation of the Japanese state — an event bitterly resented by the kokugakusha
  • Ukehi, a prehistoric practice promoted by a number of kokugakusha
  • References

    [edit]

    Further reading

    [edit]
    [edit]
    Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
    from Grokipedia
    Kokugaku (國學, "studies of our country" or "national learning") was an intellectual movement of philology, philosophy, and revival that arose in during the (1600–1868), focusing on the critical study of ancient native texts to recover an authentic Japanese worldview untainted by Chinese Confucian or Buddhist influences. Originating with early philological works like Keichū's (1640–1701) analysis of the Man’yōshū anthology around 1690, it emphasized linguistic and historical examination of classics such as the and to discern indigenous spiritual and cultural essence, often termed kami no michi (the way of the gods). The movement gained momentum in the mid-18th century through scholars like Kamo no Mabuchi (1697–1769), who interpreted Man’yōshū poetry to highlight ancient and moral spontaneity, and (1730–1801), whose monumental Kojikiden commentary on the advanced theories of (the pathos of things) and rejected rationalistic interpretations in favor of intuitive appreciation of myth and emotion. Hirata Atsutane (1776–1843) further popularized kokugaku by expanding its scope to include , , and assertions of Japan's divine superiority, fostering a network of disciples that extended its reach nationwide. Methodologically, kokugaku prioritized empirical —reconstructing archaic phonetics, grammar, and semantics—over speculative metaphysics, aiming to restore as Japan's primordial faith and counter the dominance of Sino-Japanese scholarship. Its defining achievement lay in shifting intellectual focus from universalist foreign doctrines to particularist Japanese antiquity, which cultivated a sense of cultural uniqueness and laid groundwork for later nativist ideologies. While not uniformly political in its Edo-era phase, kokugaku's emphasis on imperial mythology and anti-foreign sentiment influenced the Meiji Restoration's and , though post-1945 interpretations often downplayed its role in wartime to emphasize cultural rather than racial .

    Definition and Scope

    Origins of the Term and Conceptual Boundaries

    The term kokugaku (國學), translating to "national learning" or "studies of the country," initially denoted Japanese scholarship in distinction from Chinese learning (kangaku), with documented usage appearing as early as the (1185–1333) in texts such as the Genkō shakusho. In the (1603–1868), it evolved to label a targeted intellectual movement commencing in the late 17th century, exemplified by Keichū's (1640–1701) philological commentary on the around 1690, which employed to elucidate ancient without reliance on Chinese interpretations. Pioneering figures like Kada no Azumamaro (1669–1736) further advanced this by petitioning the in 1728 to establish dedicated institutions for Japanese classical studies, marking an institutional push against dominant Sino-centric academia. Central scholars such as Kamo no Mabuchi (1697–1769) and (1730–1801) eschewed the explicit term kokugaku, instead characterizing their endeavors as inquiries into the "ancient way" (kodō) through direct engagement with texts like the (712 CE) and (720 CE). The label's retrospective application and popularization occurred primarily in the early via Hirata Atsutane (1776–1843), whose writings linked rural practices to primordial rites, thereby broadening the movement's appeal beyond elite . Conceptually, kokugaku delineates itself by privileging empirical reconstruction of Japan's pre-Buddhist and pre-Confucian heritage, bounded by philological rigor applied to eighth-century compilations to reveal an innate, emotive Japanese ethos manifest in mythology, poetry, and ritual. It contrasts sharply with kangaku (Chinese studies) and kogaku (ancient Confucian learning), which it critiqued for imposing alien moral dualisms and hierarchies on native animism and mono no aware (pathos of things); proponents argued that true Japanese antiquity predated such imports, embodying a holistic, non-didactic worldview centered on kami worship and seasonal impermanence. While some interpretations extend kokugaku broadly to any Japanocentric inquiry, its strict boundaries exclude syncretic or revivalist efforts tainted by foreign dogma, though historiographical debates persist over whether it constitutes mere textual antiquarianism or an emergent nativism fostering cultural autonomy.

    Distinction from Contemporary Schools

    Kokugaku emerged as a deliberate counterpoint to the prevailing Confucian orthodoxy, or kangaku, which dominated Edo-period intellectual life through its emphasis on Chinese classics and moral philosophy derived from thinkers like . Kokugaku scholars, such as Kamo no Mabuchi (1697–1769), rejected this framework as a foreign distortion that imposed artificial hierarchies and ethical rationalism on Japan's innate, untutored sensibilities, arguing that Chinese "petty sophistry" had corrupted native virtues and social harmony. In philological method, Kokugaku favored direct exegesis of ancient Japanese works like the (712 CE) and (c. 759 CE) to recover a pure, pre-Sinicized "Way of the ," contrasting with Confucian schools' ritualistic focus on , as articulated by Ōgyū Sorai (1666–1728) in his advocacy for institutional ceremonies modeled on ancient Chinese sages. (1730–1801) further delineated this by critiquing Confucian and for their binary judgments of , which he saw as lacking the emotional pathos () central to Japanese antiquity. Unlike , or "Dutch learning," which pursued empirical Western sciences—such as anatomy, astronomy, and mechanics—via limited contacts at from the 1720s onward, Kokugaku eschewed pragmatic technological adaptation in favor of inward cultural restoration. proponents, including (1728–1780), prioritized verifiable experimentation and utility to address practical needs like and industry, often "forsaking" for foreign innovations, whereas Kokugaku viewed such external borrowings as threats to Japan's exceptional spiritual lineage, even as both movements challenged Sinocentric dominance. This ideological divergence underscored Kokugaku's nativist insularity against 's selective cosmopolitanism, with later figures like Hirata Atsutane (1776–1843) subordinating scientific imports to native metaphysical primacy. Kokugaku also parted from syncretic traditions like Shingaku, which blended Confucian discipline, rites, and Buddhist introspection into a populist ethic of emphasizing performative virtue over doctrinal purity. By insisting on the exclusivity of 's divine antiquity—free from Buddhist soteriological overlays or Confucian —Kokugaku proponents like Norinaga promoted a kami-centered that celebrated innate human imperfection and poetic , rejecting as dilutive to authentic national essence. These distinctions positioned Kokugaku as a philologically rigorous assertion of cultural autochthony amid 's diverse scholarly currents.

    Historical Development

    Precursors in the 17th Century

    In the early Tokugawa period, scholarly pursuits in Japan were predominantly oriented toward Neo-Confucian philosophy imported from China, yet nascent efforts emerged to examine indigenous classical texts such as the Kojiki (712), Nihon shoki (720), and Man'yōshū (c. 759), often through the lens of Buddhist philology. These investigations prioritized linguistic accuracy and historical authenticity over moralistic interpretations derived from Confucian or Buddhist frameworks, laying groundwork for later nativist scholarship by emphasizing Japan's textual heritage independent of continental influences. The foremost figure in these developments was Keichū (1640–1701), a Shingon Buddhist monk born in , (modern ), whose samurai lineage included a grandfather who served as a retainer to . Ordained early in life, Keichū applied esoteric Buddhist analytical methods—honed in and studies—to Japanese classics, producing pioneering works like Man'yō daishōki (c. 1690–1696), a comprehensive commentary on the Man'yōshū that scrutinized poetic , , and archaic vocabulary to reconstruct original forms. In Wajishōranshō (1695), he critiqued contemporary usage as corrupted by Chinese conventions, advocating a return to Man'yōshū-based historical to preserve native linguistic purity. Keichū's philological rigor, which treated Japanese texts as autonomous artifacts rather than subordinate to Sino-centric paradigms, positioned him as a forerunner of Kokugaku, influencing subsequent scholars such as Kamo no Mabuchi, who trained under Keichū's disciple and extended these methods into explicit cultural nativism. Though Keichū remained within a Buddhist context and did not fully reject foreign elements, his insistence on empirical textual over interpretive overlays foreshadowed Kokugaku's core emphasis on unadulterated ancient Japanese sources.

    Expansion in the 18th Century

    In the early , Kokugaku transitioned from isolated philological efforts to organized scholarly advocacy, with Kada no Azumamaro (1669–1736) playing a foundational role. A Shinto priest from the , Azumamaro established a private academy in around 1700, emphasizing studies of ancient texts such as the . In 1728, he submitted a to requesting the creation of a state-sponsored school of national learning to promote indigenous Japanese scholarship independent of Confucian dominance. Although rejected, this document articulated Kokugaku's aim to revive native linguistic and cultural purity, influencing subsequent nativist thinkers. Kamo no Mabuchi (1697–1769) emerged as the movement's central expander, building directly on Azumamaro's legacy after studying under him from 1728 and relocating to in 1733. Mabuchi's scholarship centered on the , the earliest anthology of Japanese poetry, which he analyzed to reconstruct an unadulterated ancient Japanese language and ethos free from Chinese phonetic impositions. His 1757 commentary Kojiki tōsho on the further advanced philological restoration, while essays like those in his collected works promoted the "way of the ancients" (furukotobumi), valorizing simplicity, vitality, and upright posture as hallmarks of pre-Sinicized . Mabuchi critiqued imported moral frameworks, asserting that true Japanese virtue resided in spontaneous emotional authenticity rather than rationalistic ethics. Mabuchi's Edo academy drew hundreds of students from diverse backgrounds, including and physicians, disseminating Kokugaku through lectures, poetry circles, and textual commentaries that spread to provincial domains. This institutionalization broadened the field's scope from textual to cultural revival, including waka composition and ritual reform, setting the stage for deeper ideological elaboration later in the century. By Mabuchi's death in 1769, Kokugaku had evolved into a coherent intellectual current challenging Sino-centric paradigms across .

    Diversification and Peak in the Late Edo Period

    In the early , Kokugaku diversified beyond its philological roots through the efforts of Hirata Atsutane (1776–1843), who shifted emphasis toward ethnographic studies of commoners, rural life, and the spirit world, attracting disciples from agricultural backgrounds and forging a national network that extended Kokugaku's reach into provincial domains. Atsutane's Ibukinoya academy in served as a hub, training over 500 direct followers who disseminated ideas linking everyday labor—such as farming—to ancient Japanese ways of life, thereby broadening the movement's appeal beyond elite and scholars. This popularization contrasted with the more textual focus of earlier figures like , as Atsutane incorporated investigations into , beliefs, and phenomena, exemplified in works like his 1822 Senkyo ibun, which documented a claimed otherworldly journey. By the Bakumatsu era (1853–1868), the Hirata school had eclipsed the Norinaga lineage, dominating Kokugaku discourse and integrating political activism, particularly advocacy for imperial reverence (sonnō) and expulsion of foreigners (jōi), which aligned with growing amid Commodore Perry's arrival in 1853. Disciples in domains like Tsuwano propagated these ideas academically, influencing unrest and contributing to the intellectual groundwork for the of 1868, though the movement's core remained rooted in assertions of Japan's divine antiquity and cultural superiority over Sino-centric frameworks. This phase marked Kokugaku's peak in influence, with its networks spanning rural and urban areas, yet it retained an apolitical strain in spirit-focused studies even as political applications intensified. The diversification manifested in varied scholarly pursuits, from Atsutane's "spirit-world studies" (reikai kenkyū)—exploring , ghosts, and ethnographic customs—to applications in domainal education and revival, fostering a synthesis of nativism with practical ethics that permeated lower ranks by the . Despite internal rivalries, such as debates over textual authenticity versus , this expansion solidified Kokugaku as a multifaceted force, peaking in adherent numbers and societal penetration just before the Tokugawa regime's collapse, though post-1868 state co-optation later reframed its legacy.

    Methodological and Intellectual Foundations

    Philological Approaches to Ancient Texts

    Kokugaku scholars developed philological methods centered on the close reading and linguistic dissection of ancient Japanese texts, such as the Kojiki (712 CE) and Man'yōshū (c. 759 CE), to reconstruct their original phonetic, grammatical, and semantic structures untainted by later Sino-Buddhist glosses. This approach, often termed kobunjigaku in its emphasis on archaic rhetoric and script, involved empirical techniques like etymological tracing of genbun (ancient words) and phonological reconstruction to distinguish innate Japanese expressions from imported corruptions. Precursors such as Keichū (1640–1701) laid groundwork by analyzing Man'yōshū phonetics in works like Man'yō daishōki (1690–1691), but Kokugaku proponents radicalized this into a tool for cultural purification, prioritizing textual fidelity over moralistic or syncretic interpretations. Kamo no Mabuchi (1697–1769) exemplified early philological rigor in his Man'yō kō (1760), a commentary that scrutinized the Man'yōshū's syntax and vocabulary to highlight its "straightforward" (naohito) emotional authenticity, contrasting it with the ornate styles of later eras influenced by Chinese poetics. Mabuchi's method rejected allegorical readings, instead deriving ethical insights directly from linguistic patterns, such as the use of unadorned verbs reflecting ancient vitality. This extended to rituals and poetry, positing the anthology as evidence of Japan's primordial harmony. Motoori Norinaga (1730–1801) systematized these techniques in his monumental Kojikiden (completed 1798; 49 volumes), an exhaustive exegesis of the that employed to revive obsolete terms and dismantle Buddhist-Confucian overlays on mythology. Norinaga argued that true understanding required immersing in the text's "rustic" (inaka no sabishisa) , using phonetic analysis to reveal as natural forces rather than moral archetypes, thus grounding Japanese antiquity in verifiable linguistic evidence. His approach influenced successors like Fujitani Nariakira (1738–1779), who formalized grammar in Ayui shō (c. ) as a philological foundation for interpreting classical literature. These methods collectively asserted that ancient texts encoded an uncorrupted (pathos of things), verifiable through disciplined scholarship rather than doctrinal assumption.

    Rejection of Sino-Centric and Buddhist Frameworks

    Kokugaku scholars systematically critiqued Sino-centric frameworks, which portrayed as the universal cultural and moral center, by asserting Japan's independent antiquity and innate superiority derived from its mythological origins in texts like the (712 CE). They argued that Confucian ethics and cosmology, imported via from the onward, imposed artificial hierarchies and alien to Japan's primal, poetic spirituality. Kamo no Mabuchi (1697–1769), in works such as Kokui kō (1765), contended that ancient Japanese virtues—uprightness and harmony with nature—preceded and surpassed Confucian imports, which he viewed as corrupting influences fostering servility and moral pretense rather than authentic conduct aligned with tenchi (heaven and earth). (1730–1801) further dismantled karagokoro (Chinese mind), the epistemological lens of dualistic ethics and historical progressivism, as incompatible with Japan's mononofu no michi (way of the warrior-poet), prioritizing emotive intuition over contrived virtue; he posited that established the archipelago as the world's origin, rendering Sino-centric tribute systems obsolete. Parallel to this, Kokugaku rejected Buddhist paradigms as exogenous accretions that obscured native kami worship and imposed nihilistic metaphysics ill-suited to Japan's animistic worldview. Buddhism, introduced in the 6th century and syncretized with Shinto via honji suijaku (native kami as manifestations of Buddhist deities), was lambasted for promoting detachment and otherworldliness, which scholars claimed eroded communal vitality and ethical spontaneity rooted in ancient poetry and rites. Norinaga, while engaging Buddhist medicine personally, intellectually subordinated it to Shinto primacy, critiquing its doctrinal emphasis on suffering and enlightenment as deviations from Japan's harmonious cosmology. Hirata Atsutane (1776–1843) escalated this by authoring Bukkyō hyakurenshō (1826), a polemical biography portraying Siddhartha Gautama as a flawed mortal whose teachings fostered superstition and moral decay, unfit for Japan's divine lineage; he advocated state-led suppression of Buddhist institutions to revive pure Shinto. These critiques, grounded in philological exegeses of pre-8th-century texts, aimed not at wholesale eradication but at demoting foreign systems to reveal an unadulterated yamato gokoro (Japanese heart), influencing later nativist policies.

    Core Tenets and Worldview

    Emphasis on Japan's Unique Antiquity

    Kokugaku scholars maintained that ancient Japan embodied a singular, pristine antiquity marked by divine origins, natural harmony, and cultural spontaneity, predating the influx of continental influences such as Confucianism and Buddhism. This era, as reconstructed through philological analysis of texts like the Kojiki (compiled in 712 CE) and Nihon Shoki (completed in 720 CE), depicted Japan as a realm founded by kami (deities), with the imperial lineage tracing unbroken descent from Amaterasu Ōmikami, the sun goddess. Scholars argued this heritage rendered Japan exceptional, unburdened by the sage-kings or cyclical dynastic upheavals characterizing Chinese historiography, and instead rooted in an inherent purity that fostered unadorned emotional expression and ethical simplicity. Central to this view was the assertion of Japan's shinkoku (divine country) status, where antiquity represented an ideal state of perfection in governance, poetry, and human-nature relations, later obscured by foreign accretions. Kamo no Mabuchi (1697–1769), in his Kokuikō (1765), extolled the vitality of ancient waka poetry from the Man'yōshū (compiled circa 759 CE) as evidence of this unmediated connection to cosmic forces, decrying Sino-Japanese literary conventions for diluting native vigor. Motoori Norinaga (1730–1801) further elaborated this by treating mythological narratives as historical verities rather than allegories, positing that ancient Japanese possessed an innate mono no aware—a profound, spontaneous sensitivity to the world's transience—untainted by rationalistic Confucian moralism. He contended this emotional authenticity defined Japan's unique antiquity, contrasting sharply with the contrived virtues imposed by imported philosophies. Such emphases served not merely descriptive ends but prescriptive ones, urging contemporaries to reclaim this heritage to rectify perceived moral and social decay under Tokugawa rule. By privileging empirical textual over speculative metaphysics, Kokugaku proponents like Norinaga rejected transcultural universals, instead deriving cultural norms from Japan's indigenous origins to affirm national distinctiveness. This framework, while grounded in 8th-century sources, projected an ahistorical ideal of antiquity as inherently superior, influencing later nativist discourses without direct evidential claims to empirical continuity beyond linguistic and literary traces.

    Cultural and Ethical Prescriptions

    Kokugaku scholars prescribed a cultural revival centered on the composition and appreciation of waka poetry as a means to cultivate the innate Japanese spirit, drawing from ancient texts like the Manyōshū to restore emotional authenticity over Confucian moral didacticism. Kamo no Mabuchi argued that true poetry aligns with the "nature of heaven and earth," rejecting imported Chinese rationalism and strict hierarchies that obscured Japan's indigenous vitality, instead promoting straightforward expression reflective of ancient simplicity. This poetic practice was not merely aesthetic but formative, fostering a mindset of natural harmony and ethical uprightness derived from pre-foreign influences, as Mabuchi critiqued Confucian virtue-based rulership for introducing artificial divisions absent in Japan's primordial unity. Ethically, Motoori Norinaga emphasized adherence to the "pure mind" of antiquity, where human conduct follows unadulterated emotions rather than imposed moral codes from Buddhism or Confucianism, viewing foreign frameworks as corruptions that deviated from the gods' original way. He posited that waka norms embody universal natural feelings, enabling ethical living through empathetic immersion in poetic "common sense," autonomous from political or didactic agendas. Shinto purity rituals, focused on cleansing practices rather than codified ethics, underscored this worldview, prioritizing ritual rectitude and awareness of impermanence (mono no aware) as guides for personal and communal conduct. Hirata Atsutane extended these prescriptions by integrating everyday rural labor with ancient ethics, asserting that mundane activities like farming embodied the "Ancient Way" and prepared souls for posthumous judgment based on deeds. His teachings revived notions of spiritual retribution, linking cultural to Japan's superiority and the emperor's divine lineage, while urging followers to reject foreign in favor of unwavering and observance. Collectively, these ideals aimed to regenerate through philologically verified native precedents, eschewing universalist imports for Japan-specific prescriptions rooted in empirical textual recovery.

    Major Figures and Schools

    Kamo no Mabuchi and Poetic Revival

    Kamo no Mabuchi (1697–1769), born in Hamamatsu, emerged as a pivotal Kokugaku scholar after relocating to Kyoto in 1733 to study classical Japanese texts under Kada no Azumamaro. His early immersion in ancient literature shifted toward waka poetry, viewing it as a vessel for Japan's unadulterated cultural essence, distinct from later accretions of Chinese and Buddhist influences. By the 1730s, Mabuchi began advocating a return to the robust, emotive style of pre-tenth-century verse, critiquing subsequent developments for their excessive refinement and reliance on allusions that obscured genuine sentiment. Central to Mabuchi's poetic revival was his extensive commentary on the , the Nara-period anthology compiled circa 759, which he interpreted as embodying the ancient Japanese ethos of direct expression, communal harmony, and attunement to natural rhythms. In Man'yō kō, drafted progressively from the late 1730s and partially published by the 1760s, he dissected thousands of poems to highlight their phonetic purity and avoidance of foreign diction, positioning the collection as superior to later anthologies like the (905) for its unpretentious vigor. This philological approach extended to practical revival: Mabuchi composed chōka (long poems) and in the Man'yō idiom, organizing uta no kai gatherings from the 1750s where participants emulated archaic forms to recapture pre-Heian spontaneity. Mabuchi's 1765 treatise Kokui kō further theorized poetry's role in national self-understanding, asserting that ancient waka fostered moral uprightness and societal cohesion absent in Confucian moralism or aristocratic artifice. Through such efforts, he cultivated a movement among , merchants, and priests, disseminating manuscripts and hosting sessions that popularized Man'yō-style composition, thereby embedding poetic practice within Kokugaku's quest for cultural authenticity. His emphasis on and vocal in early verse, as noted in works like Niimanabi, underscored poetry's origins in communal song, reinforcing its utility for reviving indigenous rituals and ethics. This revival not only democratized waka beyond courtly elites but also laid groundwork for later Kokugaku figures to expand nativism beyond into and theology.

    Motoori Norinaga's Comprehensive Scholarship

    Motoori (1730–1801), a physician by training from , emerged as a pivotal Kokugaku scholar after encountering Kamo no Mabuchi's works in the and meeting him in 1763, which redirected his focus from medicine to native studies. His scholarship integrated , literary analysis, theology, and cultural critique, spanning over four decades and producing dozens of works that systematically reconstructed Japan's ancient heritage free from Sino-Confucian overlays. Norinaga's approach privileged intuitive empathy with ancient texts over rational dissection, arguing that true understanding arose from emotional resonance rather than imposed logic, a stance he developed in opposition to the evidentiary of contemporaries like Ogyū Sorai. Central to his oeuvre was the Kojikiden (Commentaries on the Kojiki), a 49-volume begun in 1764 and completed in 1798, which meticulously parsed the eighth-century 's myths, , and to affirm their authenticity as records of Japan's primordial (deities) and imperial lineage. Through particle analysis and etymological reconstruction, Norinaga restored archaic Japanese syntax obscured by later Chinese loanwords and Buddhist interpolations, positing the as a sacred, unadulterated chronicle of divine origins rather than allegorical fiction. He extended this method to poetry and waka revival, compiling anthologies like Tama no ogushi (1787) that celebrated the unadorned sincerity of ancient verse as embodying Japan's innate magokoro (true heart). Norinaga's Shinto theology, articulated in texts like Naobi no mitama (1771), redefined as any awe-inspiring entities—benevolent or chaotic—demanding reverential obedience without moral rationalization, thus restoring ritual purity to practices diluted by Confucian ethics and Buddhist metaphysics. In , his annotations on (c. 1000) popularized , the poignant sensitivity to , as the essence of , contrasting it with foreign . This holistic framework trained over 1,000 disciples via private academies, disseminating Kokugaku beyond elites and influencing later nativist thought, though Norinaga himself avoided political activism, prioritizing scholarly fidelity to antiquity. His works, totaling some 55 volumes, underscored Japan's antiquity as self-sufficient and superior, grounded in empirical textual recovery rather than speculative philosophy.

    Hirata Atsutane and Popularization Efforts

    Hirata Atsutane (1776–1843), a native of Akita domain, emerged as a key successor to in the Kokugaku tradition, shifting emphasis from esoteric philology toward broader dissemination among non-elite audiences. After studying in and aligning with Norinaga's posthumous school around 1800, Atsutane founded an academy there by 1811, which drew disciples from , rural landowners, and merchants nationwide. His efforts marked a departure from the movement's earlier courtly and scholarly confines, extending Kokugaku's reach to agriculturalists and lower strata through practical linkages between daily routines and ancient rites. Atsutane's popularization strategy relied on voluminous —over 1,500 letters preserved—fostering a decentralized network of over 500 direct disciples during his lifetime, which ballooned to more than 4,200 adherents by the early via branch study groups across domains. He routinized "Ancient Way" precepts by portraying farm labor, household rituals, and community festivals as embodiments of divine will, countering Confucian hierarchies and Buddhist otherworldliness with an immanent, kami-centered worldview accessible to commoners. Works like his Kojiki-den (1827), a comprehensive commentary on the Kojiki, integrated ethnographic accounts of spirits and the —such as in Senkyō ibun (1822)—to affirm Japan's primordial superiority and animate nativist fervor amid foreign threats like Russian incursions. This outreach cultivated grassroots enthusiasm, with disciples establishing local circles that propagated Shinto purification rites and loyalty to imperial antiquity, laying groundwork for Kokugaku's permeation into provincial society by the . Atsutane's confinement by authorities in for heterodox views underscored the movement's growing visibility, yet his school's endurance post-mortem amplified its influence on Restoration ideologies.

    Impacts and Legacy

    Revival of Shinto Practices

    Kokugaku scholars initiated a revival of Shinto practices by emphasizing the restoration of ancient rituals and beliefs derived from texts like the Kojiki and Engishiki, rejecting syncretic elements from Buddhism and Confucianism in favor of indigenous forms known as Fukko Shinto. This effort focused on purifying worship of kami (deities) through philological analysis, promoting a return to courtly and communal rites as expressions of Japan's native spiritual order. Key practices revived included norito (declaratory prayers) and personal liturgies, which were systematized to foster direct communion with kami without intermediary doctrines. Kamo no Mabuchi (1697–1769) contributed through his commentary Engishiki norito kai jō (circa 1760s), which elucidated ancient Shinto prayers from the Engishiki, linking them to moral virtues in poetry like the Man'yōshū. His academy in Edo trained adherents in these practices, advocating Shinto as a natural way of life aligned with ancient governance by kami. Motoori Norinaga (1730–1801) advanced the revival via his Kojiki-den (completed 1798), a comprehensive exegesis that redefined kami as encompassing natural and ancestral forces, underpinning rituals tied to the imperial lineage and Amaterasu. He instituted personal morning liturgies for kami worship, modeling devotional practices that integrated scholarship with daily observance. Hirata Atsutane (1776–1843) popularized these efforts in Tama no mihashira (1812), introducing concepts like the kakuriyo (hidden world afterlife) and encouraging prayers to kami for prosperity, extending Shinto beyond elites to rural followers. His school disseminated ritual manuals and spirit veneration (reikon faith), influencing ancient court and military practices' resurgence and laying groundwork for Meiji-era institutional reforms.

    Influence on Literature, Language, and Education

    Kokugaku scholars significantly revived classical Japanese literature by prioritizing ancient texts over Sino-influenced works, with Kamo no Mabuchi (1697–1769) advancing waka poetry through his commentaries on the Man'yōshū, the eighth-century anthology, to emphasize natural rhythms and native aesthetics untainted by Confucian moralism. Motoori Norinaga (1730–1801) further shaped literary theory by articulating mono no aware—a sensitivity to the ephemeral pathos of things—via lectures on The Tale of Genji beginning in 1758, positioning Heian-era prose and poetry as embodiments of authentic Japanese emotion rather than foreign ethical frameworks. These efforts elevated native genres like waka and monogatari, fostering a view of literature as spontaneous harmony with nature, distinct from Chinese models. In language studies, Kokugaku philology sought to purify Japanese from Chinese loanwords and scripts, treating ancient vernacular as a vessel of innate national purity. Mabuchi critiqued Sino-Japanese compounds to restore "pure" usage reflective of Japan's original unity with nature. Norinaga's Kojikiden (completed 1798) pioneered analyses of verb conjugations and phonetics, establishing textuality and as core concerns while rejecting Confucian distortions of the "Japanese Heart." Hirata Atsutane (1776–1843) extended this by positing a pre-Chinese native script, influencing later orthographic debates. These reforms laid groundwork for modern kokugo () standardization, prioritizing empirical reconstruction of archaic forms over imported conventions. Educationally, Kokugaku shifted from elite Sino-centric curricula to native-focused academies, with Kada no Azumamaro petitioning for a dedicated school in 1728 and Mabuchi training hundreds at his academy in practical and poetry. Norinaga's Suzunoya academy attracted nationwide disciples, disseminating classical studies through lectures to and courtiers, including Tokugawa retainers in 1792. Post-Meiji Restoration (1868), the movement formalized as an , with scholarly societies and institutions like (founded 1882) institutionalizing kokugaku as higher learning in national literature and history, detached from its earlier politico-religious aims. This evolution promoted widespread access to Japanese antiquity, influencing imperial university curricula by the early twentieth century.

    Role in Political Nationalism and Meiji Transformation

    In the late Tokugawa period, Kokugaku fueled political nationalism through its advocacy of emperor-centered loyalty and cultural purity, challenging the shogunate's authority. Hirata Atsutane's ultranationalist vision, articulated in works like Kodō taii, portrayed Japan as unmatched among nations, attracting over 500 disciples via private academies and inspiring sonnō jōi ("revere the emperor, expel the barbarians") activism. His followers, including Matsuo Taseko (1811–1894), vandalized shogunal symbols and supported imperial restoration efforts, contributing to the pressures that culminated in the Boshin War (1868–1869). The of 1868 marked a pivotal appropriation of Kokugaku by the imperial state, which harnessed its notions of divine antiquity and racial uniqueness to legitimize centralized rule and empire-building. Officials like Fukuba Bisei (1831–1907) drew on nativist scholarship during the Great Promulgation Campaign (1870–1884) to propagate , emphasizing the emperor's sacred lineage as the core of kokutai (national polity). This ideological framework justified rapid modernization—industrialization, military reforms, and constitutional enactment—while preserving Japan's purported spiritual essence against Western influences. By the 1880s, Kokugaku had evolved into an institutionalized academic field, with societies like the Yōyōsha (founded 1875) and Ōyashima-gakkai (1886) promoting national literature, history, and education aligned with state goals. These organizations bridged pre-modern nativism and Meiji-era imperatives, fostering unified national consciousness amid imperial expansion, though scholars later debated its coercive role in suppressing dissent.

    Criticisms, Debates, and Modern Reassessments

    Internal Divisions and Methodological Disputes

    Within Kokugaku, scholars diverged on methodological approaches to reconstructing ancient Japanese ways, with early figures like Kamo no Mabuchi prioritizing poetic analysis and ethical revival through waka (classical poetry) as direct expressions of primordial simplicity and joy, while later thinkers such as Motoori Norinaga emphasized rigorous philological exegesis of broader texts to uncover emotional and cultural nuances. Mabuchi's method involved restoring poetry's original form by stripping Confucian and Buddhist accretions, viewing ancient life as unadorned and harmonious, but Norinaga, initially his disciple after a 1763 meeting, critiqued this as overly idealistic, arguing that Mabuchi undervalued the inherent pathos (mono no aware) in ancient literature, which reflected human impermanence rather than pure exuberance. This dispute highlighted a core tension: Mabuchi's intuitive, restorative poetics versus Norinaga's textual hermeneutics, which treated language as a historical artifact requiring precise etymological recovery to reveal authentic Shinto sensibilities. Norinaga's comprehensive scholarship, spanning commentaries on works like and , positioned as the methodological cornerstone, insisting that ancient words preserved unadulterated divine truths inaccessible through rationalist Confucian lenses, yet this textual purism drew later challenges from Hirata Atsutane, who accused Norinaga of excessive regarding the and neglect of living spiritual practices. Hirata, positioning himself as Norinaga's successor despite divergences, advocated empirical investigation via shamanic interviews and seances to map the spirit world (yokai), contrasting Norinaga's focus on textual inference with a practical, restorative method aimed at popular revival, including affirmative views of posthumous existence that recast Norinaga's gloomier interpretations. This methodological rift—philological scholarship versus experiential theology—fueled accusations from literary Kokugaku adherents that Hirata's religious populism diluted scholarly rigor, exacerbating a broader between "literary" nativists centered on and "religious" advocates prioritizing and cosmology. These disputes extended to ethical prescriptions, where Mabuchi and Norinaga clashed on ancient manhood—Mabuchi extolling martial straightforwardness against courtly decadence, while Norinaga defended emotional authenticity over —revealing Kokugaku's internal fragmentation despite shared nativist aims. Hirata's innovations, including dream visions claiming Norinaga's endorsement around 1801, further intensified debates on authority and evidence, as literary purists dismissed his spirit-focused as speculative, yet it broadened Kokugaku's appeal beyond elite . Such methodological variances underscored Kokugaku's evolution from poetic revival to contested interpretations of antiquity, influencing its twentieth-century academic divides between literary and religious lineages.

    Accusations of Nativism and Exclusion

    Critics of Kokugaku have accused its proponents of nativism for prioritizing indigenous Japanese antiquity—particularly Shinto texts and waka poetry—while systematically rejecting Chinese Confucian rationalism and Buddhist doctrines as corrupting foreign imports that obscured Japan's "pure" origins. Kamo no Mabuchi, in his 1758 Kokui kō, contended that ancient Japanese embraced Chinese theories as truth, leading to "tremendous chaos" in society, thereby framing Sinic influences as inherently disruptive to native harmony. Motoori Norinaga reinforced this by critiquing moralistic interpretations of Chinese classics, as in his verse asserting that "the heart of a man / Who reads Chinese / Is still Chinese," implying cultural contamination through foreign learning. Such positions have drawn charges of exclusion for constructing Japanese uniqueness around divine imperial descent and kami-centered cosmology, sidelining non-native elements in favor of an idealized prehistorical Yamato purity. Hirata Atsutane amplified these tendencies in works like Kodō taii (), declaring "Japan has no match among other countries" and portraying non-Japanese peoples as derived from "inferior materials leftover" after the creation of superior Japanese stock, which scholars interpret as racialized exclusion. These assertions, disseminated through Atsutane's widespread network of over 1,000 disciples by the 1830s, are seen as laying groundwork for xenophobic ideologies, especially as his followers influenced Bakumatsu-era slogans like sonnō jō'i ("revere the emperor, expel the barbarians") in the . Accusations extend to Kokugaku's broader role in , with historians like Harry Harootunian arguing it engendered an exclusionary by positing as ontologically distinct, a view echoed in postwar analyses linking it to imperial ideologies. Yet empirical assessments of primary texts reveal Kokugaku's core as philological restoration rather than political expulsion, with violence or direct anti-foreigner agitation absent until post-1853 foreign pressures; scholars like Mark Teeuwen thus differentiate it from "pure nativism," attributing exclusionary labels to anachronistic overlays from Meiji . This debate underscores how Kokugaku's causal focus on internal cultural revival—divorcing Japanese essence from historical Sino-Japanese synthesis—invites critique as proto-exclusionary, though its Edo-era practice remained predominantly textual and non-confrontational.

    Contemporary Scholarly Perspectives

    Contemporary scholars have increasingly reassessed Kokugaku as a multifaceted that emphasized philological analysis of ancient Japanese texts and revival, rather than viewing it exclusively as a precursor to aggressive . Susan L. Burns, in her 2003 monograph Before the Nation: Kokugaku and the Imagining of Community in Early Modern , argues that Kokugaku scholars constructed notions of communal identity through linguistic and cultural restoration, but this process did not follow a linear trajectory toward modern state ; instead, it involved contested visions of locality and antiquity that persisted into the without inevitable political . Burns's analysis draws on primary sources like Motoori Norinaga's commentaries to highlight how Kokugaku fostered a sense of shared heritage amid Edo-period social fragmentation, challenging earlier historiographical emphases on its proto-imperialist elements. In examining Kokugaku's post-Edo evolution, researchers note its institutionalization during the (1868–1912) as an academic field detached from its original politico-religious fervor. A 2012 study details how Kokugaku transitioned into formalized scholarly societies, such as those focused on classical and studies, which prioritized empirical over ideological advocacy; by the early , over 20 such groups had emerged, integrating Kokugaku methods into university curricula while diluting its nativist exclusivity. This shift, evidenced by archival records of society founding dates (e.g., the Kokugaku Kenkyūkai in 1881), reflects Meiji reformers' selective adaptation of Kokugaku to support imperial legitimacy without endorsing its anti-foreign absolutism, as seen in the 1890 Rescript on Education's invocation of ancient virtues. Debates persist regarding Kokugaku's nativist dimensions, with some 21st-century analyses framing it as an early modern analogue to exceptionalist ideologies in other contexts, such as American nativism, where cultural purism served amid external pressures. A 2022 comparative study posits that Kokugaku's rejection of Sino-centric scholarship paralleled efforts to assert indigenous , but cautions against retrojective labels of "," noting its decentralized, scholarly networks lacked unified political aims until Meiji co-optation; this view is supported by quantitative reviews of over 500 Kokugaku publications from 1700–1850, which prioritize aesthetic and revival over . Critics within , however, contend that such reassessments underplay Kokugaku's role in fostering exclusionary hierarchies, as evidenced by Hirata Atsutane's 1820s writings on divine descent, which implicitly marginalized non-Japanese influences—a tension unresolved in contemporary .

    References

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