Academic literature on the topic 'Jōdoshū Buddhists'

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Journal articles on the topic "Jōdoshū Buddhists"

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Dessì, Ugo. "Religion, Hybrid Forms, and Cultural Chauvinism in Japan." Journal of Religion in Japan 1, no. 2 (2012): 168–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/221183412x649629.

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Abstract This article analyzes a few selected case studies from different religious traditions in contemporary Japan to illustrate, first, the active role played by religion in Japan in the creation of hybrid forms and, secondly, the potentiality in two instances to promote cultural chauvinism. The topics explored here are Japanese Buddhism and the issue of human rights, Shintō’s self-representation as a ‘religion of the forest,’ and Kōfuku no Kagaku’s adoption of Theosophical themes. The discourse of human rights found in traditions such as Jōdo Shinshū, Jōdoshū, and Sōtōshū shows how this western idea is made to resonate with religious concepts from the Buddhist tradition, thus making possible a reshaping of local religious identities. While in this case the catalyst in the process is provided by an external source, the recent reshaping of Shintō as a ‘religion of the forest’ may be characterized as a glocalization leaning to ‘native’ sources, in which the ‘native’ religious tradition is subject to a creative reading following the worldwide growing awareness of ecology. Here a tendency to emphasize the superiority of the ‘native’ culture may also be noticed. However, as the case of Kōfuku no Kagaku’s adoption of various Theosophical themes illustrates, also glocalization leaning to external sources may be accompanied by forms of cultural chauvinism.
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So, Hyunsoog. "Japanese Social Work and Korean in Colonial Korea — Focused on the Hwagwang Gyowon(和光敎園) of Jōdoshū(淨土宗) of Japanese Buddhism —". SARIM 85 (31 липня 2023): 29–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.20457/sha.85.2.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Jōdoshū Buddhists"

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Gillson, Gwendolyn Laurel. "The Buddhist ties of Japanese women: crafting relationships between nuns and laywomen." Diss., University of Iowa, 2018. https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/6113.

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For many people, Japanese life is increasingly marked by precarity. This is often characterized by a lack of social and familial relationships that were the foundation of Japanese society in earlier eras. Buddhism has rarely played a part in addressing these feelings of precarity because Buddhism in Japan is associated with funerals and death. Yet some women participate in and actively create what this dissertation calls “feeling Buddhism,” which combats the feelings of helplessness and social isolation that accompany precarity. Feeling Buddhism is about sensing Buddhism, physically feeling the body perform ritual acts and inhabit sacred space. It is also about the emotions, affects, and feelings that accompany these physical acts. Based in feminist ethnography, this dissertation argues that Japanese women cultivate constructive feelings through Buddhism that enable them to craft deep and meaningful connections with one another. In particular, it focuses on the Buddhist women who belong to the Pure Land Sect or Jōdoshū. Chapter One traces the history of women’s historical involvement in Japanese Buddhism to show that Japanese women have always been active participants in Buddhism. Chapter Two examines three articles written by Japanese scholar-priests to argue that they are more concerned with praising Jōdoshū and Hōnen than addressing women’s relationship with Buddhism. Chapter Three looks at two Jōdoshū women’s groups in Kyoto and utilizes theories of ritualization and affect to argue that these experiences create new and mend existing relationships though Buddhism. Chapter Four looks at the Jōdoshū nun Kikuchi Yūken and her caring labor with young women in Tokyo to argue that her work ought to be considered a form of socially engaged Buddhism. Chapter Five moves beyond Jōdoshū to examine the International Ladies Association of Buddhism and argues that the women within the organization attempt to cultivate upper-class taste and an appreciation for an internationalization.
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Books on the topic "Jōdoshū Buddhists"

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Fujiyoshi Jikai Kiju Kinen Bukkyōgaku, Jōdogaku Ronshū Kankōkai, ed. Fujiyoshi Jikai kiju kinen Bukkyōgaku, Jōdogaku ronshū. Bunka Shoin, 1992.

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1934-, Fujii Masao, ed. Uchi no otera wa Jōdoshū =: Jōdoshū. Futabasha, 1998.

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1959-, Yoshimizu Jōsei, ed. Jōdoshū Nagoe-ha shiryōshū. Seishi Shuppan, 2003.

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Tōkyō-to Taitō-ku Kyōiku Iinkai. Shakai Kyōiku Taiikuka. and Tōkyō-to Taitō-ku Kyōiku Iinkai, eds. Jōdoshū meisaibo (kyū Asakusa-ku I): Meiji 10-nen. Tōkyō-to Taitō-ku Kyōiku Iinkai, 1991.

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Gyūshū. 說法色葉集. Seishi Shuppan, 2005.

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Hisui, Ryū, ed. Inochi no sanka: Yamamoto Kūgai kōgiroku. Munikai, 2007.

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1977-, Fitzgerald Joseph A., Strand Clark 1957-, Bloom Alfred, Coates Harper Havelock 1865-, and Ishizuka Ryūgaku, eds. Honen the Buddhist saint: Essential writings and official biography from the 14th century manuscript compiled by imperial order. World Wisdom, 2006.

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1744-1815, Hōgan, ed. Bukkyō: Kōyōshū. Chiyo migusa. Shiyōhen. Ōzorasha, 2013.

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Miyabayashi, Shōgen. 授戒: Busshin o sodateru. Seishi Shuppan, 2002.

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1933-, Maruyama Hakushō, and Taishō Daigaku Jōdogaku Kenkyūkai, eds. Jōdokyō no shisō to rekishi: Maruyama Hakushō Kyōju koki kinen ronshū. Sankibō Busshorin, 2005.

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Book chapters on the topic "Jōdoshū Buddhists"

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"10. Precepts in Japanese Pure Land Buddhism: The Jōdoshū." In Going Forth. University of Hawaii Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9780824851774-012.

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