Book ReviewJapanese Buddhism: A Cultural Historyby Yoshiro TamuraReviewed by Steven Heine Florida International University H-Buddhism Copyright 2003 by H-Net <http://www2.h-net.msu.edu/> |
This book is a recent English translation of a work by Yoshiro
Tamura originally published in Japan in the late 1960s. Tamura, who died in
1989, was in his era one of the most prominent scholars of Japanese Buddhist
studies who was probably best known for his major study of "New" Kamakura era
Buddhist figures, including Shinran, Dougen, and Nichiren. In that book Tamura
executed a very sophisticated textual analysis of the often overt but sometimes
subtle distinctions in doctrinal positions of the leading Kamakura Buddhist
thinkers in their respective appropriations of Tendai original enlightenment
thought (_hongaku shisou_), which was a dominant ideology and major influence on
those who may have departed from or criticized its contents. Tamura's approach
to Buddhist studies, with its emphasis on analyzing the textual tradition, has
perhaps been superceded for many scholars by the approaches of such figures as
Kuroda Toshio, Amino Yoshihiko, and Sasaki Kaoru, who have examined medieval
Buddhism from a social-historical perspective. Also, some of Tamura's other
writings may be questioned for espousing a standpoint that could be associated
with _nihonjinron_ (Japanese exceptionalism) theory by highlighting the
distinctiveness of Buddhist practices in the context of Japanese cultural
tradition.
A focus in the current book on Japanese cultural uniqueness for understanding
Buddhism in Japan seems indicated by the subtitle and back-cover copy, which
refers to the way "Japan's Buddhism and the nation's cultural matrix are so
inextricably linked that it is impossible to explicate the one without
understanding the other." However, the work itself does not really delve into _nihonjinron_
territory, but rather offers a conventional historical approach, with some
exceptions, including chapter 4 on "The Japanese Response," which discusses
Japanese poetic expressions of Buddhist doctrine.
The contents of the book were originally published in a Kosei monthly magazine
under the title "Hyakuman Nin no Bukkyou-shi" ("A History of Japanese Buddhism
for a Million Readers") and then in book form by Kadokawa Shoten under the title
_Nihon Bukkyou-shi Nyuumon_ (_An Introductory History of Japanese Buddhism_).
Since the original publication date was thirty-five years ago, and the book does
not represent cutting-edge scholarship at this point, it can best be evaluated
for its possible usefulness as a general survey in the classroom. The key
question is whether this would make ideal required reading for an advanced
undergraduate course on Japanese Buddhism.
The book's main advantage is also its weakness, that is, the attempt to cover
over fifteen hundred years and every major period in a little over two hundred
pages. On the one hand, all of the major schools and thinkers are introduced,
ranging from pre-Nara trends through the formation of classical and medieval
sects as well as early modern socio-political conditions to contemporary new
religious movements. The book is a reliable reference guide which offers a
snapshot of important events, leading figures, and doctrinal themes, in a way
that is evenhanded and objective, including the explanation of Nichirenist new
movements such as Risshou Kousei-kai. For that reason it can be highly
recommended.
On a close reading, however, the deficiency of this approach becomes clear. For
example, chapter 3, dealing with the development of early Buddhist temples in
Japan, tries to show a progression from Asuka-dera through Shiteenou-ji and
Houryuu-ji to Yakushi-ji temple, but the discussion in the narrative does not
sufficiently flesh out what the diagram on page 41 is trying to illustrate about
unfolding trends in iconography and scriptural exegetical studies.
Also, the sections on such topics as Eizon and the revival of the Ritsu school
during the Kamakura era and the role of the _danka_ system in the Tokugawa era
are a bit confusing and misleading in their brevity. In chapter 8, "The
Founders of Kamakura Buddhism" refers to a "definite philosophical development"
between the teachings of Hounen, Nounin, and Eisai in the late-twelfth century
and the thirteenth-century founders of new Buddhist sects (p. 93), but this key
point is never clearly explained. Nevertheless, keeping these limitations in
mind, _Japanese Buddhism_ should make a significant contribution to much-needed
instructional materials in the field.
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