TITLE

There’s a God for That

SUBTITLE

Optimism in the Face of Earthquakes, Tsunamis and Meltdowns

AUTHOR

Joseph Honton

PUBLISHER

Frankalmoigne, Sebastopol

GENRE

Narrative nonfiction

BOOKSTORE SUBJECTS

TRAVEL / Asia / Japan

RELIGION / Shintoism

POLITICAL SCIENCE / Peace

CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION

1. Japan – Religious life and customs

2. Earthquakes – Japan

3. Tsunamis – Japan

4. Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant (Japan) Accidents

5. Antinuclear movement

6. Ghost stories, Japanese

NOVELIST APPEAL

STORYLINE: Issue-oriented

PACE: Relaxed

TONE: Moving; Reflective

WRITING: Lyrical; Thoughtful; Richly detailed; Stylistically complex

PAGES / WORDS

xvi, 168pp, glossary

40,000 words

MAPS / ILLUSTRATIONS

12 maps, 2 line drawings

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CONTROL NUMBER

2012940666

ISBN

978-0-9856423-0-3 (hardcover)

978-0-9856423-1-0 (pbk.)

978-0-9856423-2-7 (eBook)

978-0-9856423-3-4 (Kindle)

PRICE

US $28.00 (hardcover)

US $16.00 (pbk.)

US $11.99 (eBook)

US $9.99 (Kindle)

AVAILABLE FROM

Wholesale: Ingram

Retail: Frankalmoigne

PUBLICATION DATE

October 2012

There's a god for that

motion. On their feet the dancers wear white, split-toed tabi that modestly cover both feet and ankles, and which simultaneously allow them to glide, step-by-step, through their motions without lifting their feet off the stage. In both hands – which are always outstretched – the dancers hold props that help to carry the story. When performing a fighting song they may carry swords, halberds, maces, or bows and arrows. When performing sacred songs they resort to paper folding fans, which they use to graceful effect; or to gohei, which are the Shinto wands that have red, green and white zigzag streamers attached; or to suzu, which are composed of a dozen or more jingle bells, arranged in vertical columns, in tree-like fashion, around a short handle. When suzu are used, they are shaken with small motions as the dancers move through their steps, creating a meditative sound like the rustling of leaves.

The kanji characters for kagura literally mean “seat of the gods,” a nod to the Shinto myth at its roots. The first telling of the story is in the Kojiki (“Records of Ancient Matters”) written down in the year 712. As the story is told, the sun goddess Amaterasu-ōmikami hid herself in a cave and sealed its entrance shut, plunging the world into darkness. She remained there until one day when the goddess of revelry, Ame-no-uzume, performed a dance with such hilarious and promiscuous antics that it put the other gods into a silly state of mind. With this merriment going on outside the cave, Amaterasu’s curiosity overcame her and she opened the door, thus allowing her divine light to be restored to the world.

Kagura is an invocation to the gods, a call to seat themselves among us. Classical kagura has its roots in this tale and is performed with a reverence befitting its sacred origins. But over time – starting in the early seventeenth century – the antics of Ame-no-uzume were reenacted by commoners, and the folk tradition of Iwami-kagura began, a tradition that reenacts the Shinto myths of the Kojiki. Today, there are 33 of these stories, which are performed by troupes in the Iwami region of Shimane and Hiroshima.

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