Onychorhynchus coronatus
Well-Known Member
In many areas of the world monkeys are viewed as negatively or comically but in Japanese culture the monkey occupies a far more nuanced position as a symbolic animal.
In Japan the monkey has long been percieved within the indigenous religion of Shinto as a messenger of the gods (known as the "Kami"):
"This tension between contrasting cultural specifications of primates is clearly illustrated by Japanese macaques. In Japan the monkey has positive religious associations as one of the animal reincarnations of the Buddha. It is also a sacred messenger or otsukali in shinto, acting as a mediator between the kami spirits and human beings (Ishizaki 1991, 240). Ohnuki-Tierney has invoked this sacred association of the monkey in connection with crop-raiding in the past."
This association appears to have arisen due to the feeding behaviour and the habitat of the monkeys being sacred areas within the Shinto cosmovision such as mountains:
"The monkeys often shared the human habitat, coming down from the mountains into the fields. In the spatial schema of the Japanese at the time, the mountains were the abode of deities, whereas the fields belonged to the humans. The macaques ate people's crops, thus sharing their food. In this cosmos, the monkey was a sacred messenger to humansent by the Mountain Deity."
However, this does not mean that macaques are necessarily viewed as wholely positive animals in Japan and their tendency to raid crops or destroy human property and to behave aggressively to eachother or to people and be sexually uninhibited:
"However, in Japanese folklore monkeys also appear morally dubious or as inauspicious animals. The sarugami taiji (monkey spirit conquest) tale (from the twelfth century Konjaku monogatari) tells of frightening, monkey-like figures that terrorize villages and demand human sacrifices from them (Nakamura 1989, 54-55). There are many regional tales of dangerous monkey monsters or goblins in the mountains that threaten the lives of the people they encounter (Nagamatsu 1993, 15-18; Suzuki 1986, 275-80; Chiba 1995a, 45). Bad people can be punished by being transformed into monkeys (Higuchi 1991, 118). Monkeys are associated with taboo behavior in upland areas (Ue 1987, 98-99) and have the power to possess people walking through the mountains (Suzuki 1982, 298)."
In many areas of Japan these charismatic primates therefore occupy an ambiguous position which is simultaneously imbued with positive and negative characteristics which largely depend on the context.
Sources: "Monkeys on the Move: The Natural Symbolism of People-Macaque Conflict in Japan", John Knight, 1999 (Journal: The Journal of Asian Studies).
Photo credits to @Tim May, @Goura and @YuanChang.
In Japan the monkey has long been percieved within the indigenous religion of Shinto as a messenger of the gods (known as the "Kami"):
"This tension between contrasting cultural specifications of primates is clearly illustrated by Japanese macaques. In Japan the monkey has positive religious associations as one of the animal reincarnations of the Buddha. It is also a sacred messenger or otsukali in shinto, acting as a mediator between the kami spirits and human beings (Ishizaki 1991, 240). Ohnuki-Tierney has invoked this sacred association of the monkey in connection with crop-raiding in the past."
This association appears to have arisen due to the feeding behaviour and the habitat of the monkeys being sacred areas within the Shinto cosmovision such as mountains:
"The monkeys often shared the human habitat, coming down from the mountains into the fields. In the spatial schema of the Japanese at the time, the mountains were the abode of deities, whereas the fields belonged to the humans. The macaques ate people's crops, thus sharing their food. In this cosmos, the monkey was a sacred messenger to humansent by the Mountain Deity."
However, this does not mean that macaques are necessarily viewed as wholely positive animals in Japan and their tendency to raid crops or destroy human property and to behave aggressively to eachother or to people and be sexually uninhibited:
"However, in Japanese folklore monkeys also appear morally dubious or as inauspicious animals. The sarugami taiji (monkey spirit conquest) tale (from the twelfth century Konjaku monogatari) tells of frightening, monkey-like figures that terrorize villages and demand human sacrifices from them (Nakamura 1989, 54-55). There are many regional tales of dangerous monkey monsters or goblins in the mountains that threaten the lives of the people they encounter (Nagamatsu 1993, 15-18; Suzuki 1986, 275-80; Chiba 1995a, 45). Bad people can be punished by being transformed into monkeys (Higuchi 1991, 118). Monkeys are associated with taboo behavior in upland areas (Ue 1987, 98-99) and have the power to possess people walking through the mountains (Suzuki 1982, 298)."
In many areas of Japan these charismatic primates therefore occupy an ambiguous position which is simultaneously imbued with positive and negative characteristics which largely depend on the context.
Sources: "Monkeys on the Move: The Natural Symbolism of People-Macaque Conflict in Japan", John Knight, 1999 (Journal: The Journal of Asian Studies).
Photo credits to @Tim May, @Goura and @YuanChang.
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