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The Transnational Development of Japanese Buddhism During the Postwar Period : The Case of Tana Daishō
Author Ama, Michihiro (著)=阿満道尋 (au.)
Source Pacific World: Journal of the Institute of Buddhist Studies
Volumen.14 Third Series
Date2012
Pages1 - 26
PublisherInstitute of Buddhist Studies
Publisher Url http://www.shin-ibs.edu/
LocationBerkeley, CA, US [伯克利, 加利福尼亞州, 美國]
Content type期刊論文=Journal Article
Language英文=English
NoteMichihiro Ama
Department of Languages
University of Alaska Anchorage
AbstractWhile there is abundant scholarship on the postwar reconstruction of Japanese religion and identity, the development of Japanese religion beyond its national borders after World War II is relatively understudied. This paper aims to expand the scope of scholarship on modern Japanese Buddhism by treating changes that affected Japanese Buddhism in the United States during the postwar period as an extended experience of Buddhism in Japan. It analyzes the work of Tana Daishō (1901–1972), an Issei Shin Buddhist minister who spent the second half of his life in the U.S., using Robert Bellah’s concepts of “facilitated variation” and “conserved core processes.” Tana wrote and compiled a set of books in Japanese as a doctrinal exegesis and expressed his vision for the development of Shin Buddhism in the United
States. In his discussion of this future adaptation, however, he always referred to the Japanese tradition as the basis of comparison and justification. He set out to recover “archaic” Shin Buddhist symbols while taking into account the differing cultural conventions of Japan and the United States. By situating the study of modern Japanese Buddhism
in a transnational context, I hope to clarify a broader spectrum of the Japanese Buddhist experience during the mid-twentieth century.
Table of contentsINTRODUCTION
A SHORT BIOGRAPHY OF TANA DAISHŌ
TANA’S WORKS
THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE HONGANJI
SHIN BUDDHISM AS A FAMILY RELIGION
REDEFINING SHIN BUDDHIST BENEFITS
DEFINING “PRACTICE” FOR AMERICAN SHIN BUDDHISTS
CONCLUSION
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
NOTES
ISSN08973644 (E)
Hits99
Created date2015.02.11
Modified date2021.02.03



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