izpis_h1_title_alt

Šamanistični elementi v Devetih pesmih (Jiuge 九歌) iz zbirke Elegij države Chu (Chuci 楚辭) s poudarkom na šamanistični kopulaciji
ID Hristov, Hana (Author), ID Motoh, Helena (Mentor) More about this mentor... This link opens in a new window

.pdfPDF - Presentation file, Download (1,21 MB)
MD5: 156E914FB0FFB9ADC0BC420808EBDC0E

Abstract
Elegije države Chu poleg štirih knjig in petih klasikov (si shu wu jing四书五经) pred-stavljajo temeljni kamen kitajskega literarnega kanona. Nastale so v obdobju vojskujočih se držav, dejanski izvor nekaterih pesmi pa sega vse do polmitološke dinastije Xia夏朝 in še v zgodnejša obdobja kitajske zgodovine. V magistrskem delu se ukvarjam s šamani-stičnimi elementi v drugem poglavju zbirke, tj. Devet pesmi. Na začetku dela se osredi-njam na težavno vprašanje zgodnjega kitajskega šamanizma, ki še danes ni dokončno razrešeno. V zvezi s tem se posvetim dvema najpomembnejšima dokumentoma, ki ome-njata besedo wu巫, pomenski ekvivalent za šamana. Besedili sta pomemben dokaz, da se je na zgodnjem Kitajskem šamanizem, kakršnega so poznali v dinastijah Shang商朝 in Zhou 周朝, že na začetku birokratiziral, kakor trdi Thomas Michael. Izvirnejša oblika šamanizma se je ohranila na jugu Kitajske, v državi Chu 楚, kjer je na podlagi ljudskih obrednih pesmi nastalo Devet pesmi. V osrednjem delu raziskave v njih analiziram več tipičnih značilnosti šamanizma, na primer vzpon duše ali magični let, trans, obsedenost in ljubezensko zvezo z zavezniškim duhom oziroma božanstvom. Použitje ljubezenske zveze med šamanom in božanstvom v obrednih pesmih je lahko zgolj uprizorjeno na na-čin plesne igre ali pa se izrazi z dejanskim spolnim aktom, kopulacijo.

Language:Slovenian
Keywords:šamanizem, zgodnji kitajski šamanizem, Elegije države Chu, Devet pesmi, kopulacija.
Work type:Master's thesis/paper
Typology:2.09 - Master's Thesis
Organization:FF - Faculty of Arts
Place of publishing:Ljubljana
Publisher:[H. Hristov]
Year:2022
Number of pages:72 str.
PID:20.500.12556/RUL-140322 This link opens in a new window
UDC:821.581-1:256
COBISS.SI-ID:122953987 This link opens in a new window
Publication date in RUL:14.09.2022
Views:1172
Downloads:57
Metadata:XML DC-XML DC-RDF
:
Copy citation
Share:Bookmark and Share

Secondary language

Language:Chinese
Title:Shamanistic elements in The Nine Songs (Jiuge 九歌) from the anthology Verses of Chu (Chuci 楚辞) with an emphasis on shamanistic copulation
Abstract:
Verses of Chu, along with The Four Books and Five Classics (si shu wu jing四书五经) represent the foundation of Chinese literary canon. They were written in the Warring States period, however the origin of some of the poems date back to the semi-mythical Xia dynasty and some to even earlier periods of Chinese history. This paper examines the shamanistic elements in the second chapter of the anthology The Nine Songs. The paper firstly focuses on the difficult question of early Chinese shamanism, which has not been resolved to this date. In connection with this, the paper focuses on the two most important documents which contain the word wu巫, which is a semantic equivalent for a shaman. The texts are an important piece of evidence that prove that shamanism, as it was known in the early Chinese dynasties Shang商朝 and Zhou周朝, was bureaucratised very early on, as it is claimed by Thomas Michael. A more original form of shamanism was pre-served in the south of China, in the Chu state楚, where The Nine Songs were created based on ritualistic folk songs. The main part of this paper focuses on the analysis of sev-eral typical characteristics of shamanism, such as the ascension of the soul or the magical flight, trance, the obsession and the love relationship with an ally spirit or a deity. The consummation of a love relationship between a shaman and a deity in ritualistic songs can be depicted through a dance game or can be expressed in an actual sexual act, copula-tion.

Keywords:Shamanism, early Chinese shamanism, Verses of Chu, The Nine Songs, copulation.

Similar documents

Similar works from RUL:
Similar works from other Slovenian collections:

Back