Engendering Faith: Women and Buddhism in Premodern JapanBarbara Ruch For many years, students of China, Korea, and Japan were taught virtually nothing about Asian women in institutional religion. What were women's spiritual expectations of themselves? Who were the women initiators, patrons, and ecclesiastical leaders in the formative years of Buddhism in Japan? What were their activities throughout the medieval centuries? Japanese philosophy and religion seldom asked these questions, instead maintaining research methods and approaches that were fated to carve out a history nearly devoid of women. In the twenty-first century, it is crucial that we reconstruct the curriculum of exclusively androcentric religious texts from the experience, practices, religious views, and history of women in religion. Engendering Faith is a monumental and pioneering study on women and Buddhism. Collecting twenty contributions into five thematic sections, it brings new research on women and Buddhism to English-speaking scholars of Japan, religious history, and women's studies. A set of prefatory articles translated and written by Barbara Ruch provide a literature review, historical context, an overview of contributions, and an introduction. Richly illustrated and with a comprehensive list of characters, Engendering Faith is essential reading for anyone interested in premodern Japanese history, culture, and religion. |
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Page 519
... portrait lineages , depicting husband and wife pairs and family groupings . The first example , shown in figure 2 , is from a portrait lineage of the Kōyōji temple in Osaka . It dates from the latter half of the Muromachi period ...
... portrait lineages , depicting husband and wife pairs and family groupings . The first example , shown in figure 2 , is from a portrait lineage of the Kōyōji temple in Osaka . It dates from the latter half of the Muromachi period ...
Page 523
... portrait in the lineage , but to integrate the narrator of the preface into the genealogy Myōkō's picture was substituted . This change indicates that the order and layout of per- sonages in portrait lineages followed set conventions ...
... portrait in the lineage , but to integrate the narrator of the preface into the genealogy Myōkō's picture was substituted . This change indicates that the order and layout of per- sonages in portrait lineages followed set conventions ...
Page 526
... Portrait lineages also preserved the physical like- nesses of congregational members for posterity , those living in the last age of the dharma . Portrait lineages had the effect of binding the congregation closely together and ...
... Portrait lineages also preserved the physical like- nesses of congregational members for posterity , those living in the last age of the dharma . Portrait lineages had the effect of binding the congregation closely together and ...
Contents
Illustrations | xiii |
Chronological Tables | xix |
Frontispiece | xxi |
Copyright | |
44 other sections not shown
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abbess Amida became bikuni biographies bodhisattva Buddha buddhahood Bukkyō century ceremonies China Chinese Chronicles of Japan Chūsei Confucian convents court Buddhism death deity divorce documents dragon king's daughter early Emperor Empress Kōmyō established example female demons five obstructions Fugen Fujiwara hair Heian period Hōjō Hokkeji husband Ibid Ichijō imperial Japanese Buddhism Jizō josei Kamakura period Kannon Karukaya kenkyū kodai Kūkai Kumano Kyoto later Lotus Sutra male Mantokuji Masako medieval Minamoto monasteries monastic monks and nuns monogatari mother Mount Hiei Mount Kōya Mugai Nyodai Munetada Nara period nenbutsu Nihon Nishiguchi novice nunneries official ordination paintings partial tonsure practice prayers precepts priest Province Pure Land rebirth religious Rinzai Ritsu rituals role Ryōnen Saichō salvation scholars scroll sect Shinran shiryō shogunal Shōnin shrine status story teachings temple Tendai tion Tōdaiji Tōkeiji Tokugawa Tokyo tonsure Vinaya wife woman women Yoritomo Yoshikawa kōbunkan Zenkōji