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词条 Otōri
释义

  1. Custom

  2. History

  3. References

  4. Footnotes

{{Otheruses|Otori (disambiguation)}}{{More footnotes|date=April 2010}}{{Nihongo|Otōri|オトーリ, 御通り, おとおり}} is a drinking custom in Miyako Island, Okinawa Prefecture, Japan. The custom involves one person offering a toast to each of several other people in a round.

Custom

This group ritual involves people sitting in a circle. One person, the oya (master of ceremonies), makes a speech related to the particular celebration or ceremony being observed, filling his own glass with alcohol, usually an Okinawan distilled beverage called awamori, and drains it. The oya then moves the circle and pours awamori for everyone. After that he makes a short closing speech and choose another oya to start the next round.[1]

History

Similar group rituals involving sake were once practiced across Japan. However, because the consumption of sake itself was limited to auspicious occasions, the popularization of otōri happened relatively recently. It is said that multi-turn ōtori started only after Okinawa Prefecture returned to Japan in 1972.[1] Another popularized drinking ritual called Yoron kenpō can be found on Yoron Island, Kagoshima Prefecture.

The word otōri was used by Miyako's northern neighbor, Ryūkyū on Okinawa Island. As part of New Year's rituals, the king offered awamori to the royal family members, and the highest-ranking officials called sanshikan.[2] {{citation needed span|text=The first record of otōri on Miyako Island was in the 14th century, when shōchū was shared by soldiers going to fight. In the 16th century, the same custom was recorded on Kurima Island.|date=September 2016}}

In the 1980s, otōri became popular in Miyako Island, Okinawa Prefecture.{{Citation needed|date=October 2010}}[3]

Otōri is seen as a root cause of alcohol-related health problems in Miyako. In 2005, Miyako Health Authority started issuing ōtori cards, red cards (off liquor) and yellow cards (giving one's liver a rest), with which people were supposed to decline the offer more easily.[2]

References

  • Otōri, Miyako's way of drinking sake (part 1)(2002), Ryukyu Shimpo (evening), Aug. 18.
  • Otōri, Miyako's way of drinking sake (part 2)(2002), Ryukyu Shimpo (evening), Aug. 25.
  • Otōri, by Ganaha Munehiro, in Japanese

Footnotes

1. ^{{cite book |author=Hagio Toshiaki 萩尾俊章 | title=Awamori no bunkashi 泡盛の文化誌 |year=2004 |language=Japanese |url=http://www.isc.senshu-u.ac.jp/~thb0309/OishiiOkinawa/awamorikonjaku0329.pdf }}
2. ^{{cite book |author=Hagio Toshiaki 萩尾俊章 | title=Awamori konjaku 泡盛今昔 |year=2016 |language=Japanese |url=http://www.isc.senshu-u.ac.jp/~thb0309/OishiiOkinawa/awamorikonjaku0329.pdf }}
3. ^* おとーり 宮古の飲酒法 ぷからすゆうの会(2005) Hirara-shi. Otōri, the drinking of shochu at Miyako (2005) Pukarasuyūnokai. Hirara-shi (Miyakojima-shi).
{{DEFAULTSORT:Otori}}

2 : Drinking culture|Miyako culture

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