Dance as Aggressiveness

Authors

  • Tina Hamrin Stockholm University

Keywords:

Dance, Religious, Emotions, Japan, Authority, Leadership, Religious, Spirit possession, Trance, Hawaii, World War, 1939-1945, Experience (Religion), Gender, Women, Ritual, Ecstasy, Altered states of consciousness

Abstract

The woman who founded Tenho-kötai-jingii-kyö, Kitamura Sayo (1900-1967), publicly announced in July 1945 that the world was coming to an end and that she had been chosen by the absolute deity Tensho Kotai Jingu to be the savior of the world. People began to gather to her banner, a religious organization was formed, and legal incorporation of the group as a religious juridical person took place in January 1947. Teaching that regret, desire, hatred, love and other emotional antipathies were the cause of all misfortune, the founder urged people to free themselves of such restraints by praying earnestly until they attained a state in which the self was completely forgotten. Since the members of the group perform a ritual dance and fall into an ecstatic condition at the group meetings, the movement is called the Dancing Religion.  
Section
Articles

Published

1996-01-01

How to Cite

Hamrin, T. (1996). Dance as Aggressiveness. Scripta Instituti Donneriani Aboensis, 16, 175–192. https://doi.org/10.30674/scripta.67228