Nostalgia for a Unified Realm
251
of a principle-free, place-grounded narrative to win readers may point to
the limited ability of a narrowly confined geographical site, particularly
one associated with the power of a family whose members were at war
with each other, to resonate with a broad audience in an age of upheaval.
TALES OF THE PAST: THE HEIKE
The limited medieval readership of both
Gods and Sovereigns
and
Plums
and Pines
should not be mistaken for an indication that either cosmo-
logical logic or the symbolism of place was no longer of concern. Both
elements appear in the preface to
The Tale of the Heike
, a work that deals
with events central to many of the
Mirrors
and that was taking shape in
the interim between the Kamakura and Muromachi
Mirrors
.
34
And un-
like either of the
Mirror
-influenced experiments just discussed, the
Heike
seized the medieval imagination.
35
Although a full treatment of the
Heike
falls outside the scope of this chapter, the work deserves mention both as
a way of contextualizing its fourteenth-century status—its subsequent
popularity notwithstanding, the
Heike
was but one experiment among
many with narrativizing the past in this time period—and to show what
the basic rhetorical strategies on view in its preface may reflect about a
gap between medieval audience expectations and developments within
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