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The Yamaguchi disputes: apprehension and representation in the early years of the jesuit mission in Japan (1549-1569)

Grant number: 21/02947-1
Support Opportunities:Scholarships in Brazil - Scientific Initiation
Start date: August 01, 2021
End date: July 31, 2022
Field of knowledge:Humanities - History - Modern and Contemporary History
Principal Investigator:Carlos Alberto de Moura Ribeiro Zeron
Grantee:Pedro Henrique Irii Guedes
Host Institution: Faculdade de Filosofia, Letras e Ciências Humanas (FFLCH). Universidade de São Paulo (USP). São Paulo , SP, Brazil

Abstract

The present work intends to study how the Japanese religious and cultural practices were incorporated and led the Jesuits' way of acting in the Japanese mission of the 16th century, focusing on their early years, the so-called Initial Period (1549-1569). This question presupposes understanding how missionaries learned and represented Japanese religious and cultural symbols. With this purpose, the documents written by the Jesuits Cosme de Torres (1510-1570) and Juan Fernández (1526-1567) in the event known as Yamaguchi Disputes, referring to the conversations and debates that the missionaries had with the Japanese monks and "bonzos" in the city of Yamaguchi, south of the island of Honshu, in 1551, two years after the start of the mission. (AU)

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