Much of the films action is in natural settingsthe
forest, rivers, the bay; and his activities there, in addition to
logging, are hunting, trapping, flirtations, and interactions with
water and weather. There is also talk among the loggers about the
Mountain Kami and various taboos; and they engage in ritual
behaviors associated with trapping and killing wild birds and animals.
Shinto, of course, provides a context for all this, both in terms
of its world view and its ritual tradition.
A summary of the Shinto world view needs to contain
at least three major insights. First, in the human encounter with
the world, nature is understood as creative and life-giving (musubi),
a generative
vital force that connotes the sense
of harmoniously creating and connecting. This vital power is directly
associated with kami, the Japanese term given to those unusual
and superior aspects of both nature and humanity that
are experienced as possessing an awesome presence and potency, such
as natural objects in heaven and earth (heavenly bodies, mountains,
rivers, fields, seas, rain, and wind), and great persons, heroes
or leaders. This myriad of kami are not metaphysically
different in kind from either nature or humanity, but rather are
superior and unusual manifestations of that
potency inherent in all life.
The second Shinto insight indicates that although
we are grounded in the vital process of musubi and kami,
we can also be disrupted and disjoined from it. In the tradition
the more prevalent expression of this sense of obstruction is the
term pollution. Purity, in turn, characterizes
the state of creativity.
The third insight concerns the straightening
action taken by humans to overcome those powers that obstruct or
pollute the life-giving power of musubi and kami.
There are a variety of means for achieving this, but it is principally
through ritual actions ranging from formal liturgies conducted by
priests in shrine precincts, to ascetic practice (misogi)
and major public festivals. The ascetic practice of misogi
at Tsubaki Grand Shrine in Mei Prefecture, for example, is a water
purification rite that involves standing under a waterfall after
preparatory warm-ups and various recitations.3 In the
fire festival (O-tou Matsuri) at Shingu-shi, Wakayama-ken,
the men who are going to carry the fire torches start with misogi
at the ocean beach, then change to white clothes with a rope belt,
and climb 538 stone steps to the summit of Kaminokura-yama. Upon the arrival of the sacred fire, everyones
torch is lit, and when the shrine gates are opened, 2000 men with
torches in hand rush down to the foot of the mountain.4
All these activities, from rituals to festivals, are conceived of
in terms of ridding people and things of pollution (tsumi)
in order to reinstate purity.
|