242
Memories of Mirrors
framework that comes to limit the
Mirrors
’ specific cachet as productive
historiographic tools, even as it reflects greater sociohistorical realities.
One result of this, as this chapter will argue, is that both of the
Mirrors
’
final medieval iterations are primarily legible as expressions of a historio-
graphic nostalgia. Ironically, the true indication of the
Mirrors
’ attain-
ment of mainstream status is their use in precisely this capacity: the genre
that originated as a celebration of the past as meaningful on multiple lev-
els becomes part of the past that is desired.
To assess the legacies of this breakdown more broadly, as well as to
highlight how central to historiography the
Mirrors
and their concerns
had become, this chapter first turns to the two alternative historiographic
approaches suggested by the abovementioned
Gods and Sovereigns
and
Plums and Pines
.
5
Early historiographic projects from the age of the
Ashikaga shoguns, both of these works adopt some of the
Mirror
tech-
niques with uneven results. This chapter will then consider their respec-
tive appropriations of
Mirror
elements in comparison with the rhetorical
strategies suggested by the preface to the more popular
Tale of the Heike
.
Lastly, in light of the varied receptions of these works and their techniques,
the chapter will turn to
The Clear Mirror
and
The Mirror of the Gods
to
examine how the disaggregation of cosmological principle, place, and the
past has impacted the ability of a
Mirror
or a similarly inspired text to
present a persuasive account of the events it relates. In this light, the
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