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The Honganji Institution, 1500-1570: The Politics of Pure Land Buddhism in Late Medieval Japan
Author Amstutz, Galen Dean
Date1992.07
Pages302
PublisherPrinceton University
Publisher Url http://www.princeton.edu
LocationPrinceton, NJ, US [普林斯顿, 紐澤西州, 美國]
Content type博碩士論文=Thesis and Dissertation
Language英文=English
Degreedoctor
InstitutionPrinceton University
DepartmentDepartment of Religion
AdvisorTeiser, Stephen F.
Publication year1992
KeywordPure Land Buddhism; Japan; Shin (Sect); Honganji=西本願寺; Muromachi=室町
AbstractSince its pivotal sixteenth century the Honganji has been the largest religious institution in Japan. It achieved this status because it reflected the deep privatization which has been the underlying current of Japanese politics since the late medieval period. The sixteenth century institution can be described in terms of its general membership, which had many bourgeois characteristics and was on the cutting edge of contemporary economic development; in terms of its leadership, which was devoted to lessening political frictions with warlords by centralizing authority; in terms of its widespread geography, centered in the richest provinces of Japan; in terms of its political activity as a private organization; and in terms of its religious forms, which reflected both extensive popularization and the prosperous sociopolitical status of its membership. The individualistic character of Honganji's Pure Land Buddhist doctrine runs parallel with the sociopolitical character of the institution and cannot be correctly interpreted without the sociopolitical history. Honganji religion has often been likened to a protestant form of Buddhism, but compared to reformed Christianity in Europe, it was more peacefully continuous with earlier religious institutions and more successfully adjusted between the secular and religious spheres.


Table of contentsAbstract
Introduction
Ch 1. The Legal Background of Honganji
Ch 2. The Muromachi Political Context and the Social Forms of the Honganji General Membership
Ch 3. The Honganji Leadership and its Organizational Policies
Ch 4. The Geography of the Honganji Network
Ch 5. Honganji's Political Activity
Ch 6. The Outer Forms of Honganji's Religious Culture

Conclusions and Comparative Reflections
Hits364
Created date1998.04.28
Modified date2016.03.28



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