Shotoku: Ethnicity, Ritual, and Violence in the Japanese Buddhist Tradition

前表紙
Oxford University Press, 2008/04/18 - 256 ページ
Prince Shotoku (573?-622?), the purported founder of Japanese Buddhism, is widely referred to as Japan's first national hero. The cult that grew up around his memory is recognized as one of the most important phenomena in early Japanese religion. This book examines the creation and evolution of the Shotoku cult over the roughly 200 years following his deatha period that saw a series of revolutionary developments in the history of Japanese religion. Michael Como highlights the activities of a cluster of kinship groups who claimed descent from ancestors from the Korean kingdom of Silla. He skillfully places these groups in their socio-cultural context and convincingly demonstrates their pivotal role in bringing continental influences to almost every aspect of government and community ideology in Japan. He argues that these immigrant kinship groups were not only responsible for the construction of the Shotoku cult, but were also associated with the introduction of the continental systems of writing, ritual, and governance. By comparing the ancestral legends of these groups to the Shotoku legend corpus and Imperial chronicles, Como shows that these kinship groups not only played a major role in the formation of the Japanese Buddhist tradition, they also to a large degree shaped the paradigms in terms of which the Japanese Imperial cult and the nation of Japan were conceptualized and created. Offering a radically new picture of the Asuko and Nara period (551794), this innovative work will stimulate new approaches to the study of early Japanese religion focusing on the complex interactions among ideas of ethnicity, lineage, textuality, and ritual.
 

目次

Introduction
3
1 Ethnicity and the Founding Legend of Japanese Buddhism
13
2 Pure Land and the Millennium in the Early Shotoku Cult
33
3 Ancestors Estates and Angry Gods in the Early Royal Cult
55
4 Ethnicity Sagehood and the Politics of Literacy in the Early Shotoku Cult
75
5 Violence Vengeance and Purification in the Early Shotoku Cult
93
6 Shotoku and Gyoki
111
7 Doji Saicho and the PostNihon Shoki Shotoku Cult
133
Conclusion
155
Primary Sources for the Study of the Early Shotoku Cult
161
Glossary
169
Notes
185
Works Cited
215
Index
227
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著者について (2008)

Michael Como is Fukami Professor of Shinto Studies at Columbia University.

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