History of Japanese Religions Volume 3: Religious Fusions, Separations, and Collisions
Edited by Itō Satoshi and Yoshida Kazuhiko
CONTENTS
Introductory Remarks: Religious Fusions, Separations, and Collisions Itō Satoshi
Section 1: Fusing Kami and Buddhas 1 Buddhism as a Teaching on Causality and Retribution and Its Eastward Transmission Sone Masato 2 Combinatory Paradigms Between Kami and Buddhas in the Nara and Heian Periods Yoshida Kazuhiko 3 The Way of Yin and Yan, Protective Talismans, and East Asia Mizuguchi Motoki 4 The Formation of Shugendō: Logics, Discourses, and Texts to Provide Legitimacy as Dharma Kawasaki Tsuyoshi 5 “Shinto” in the Medieval and Early Modern Periods Itō Satoshi
Section 2: Conflicting Religions 1 The Historical Significance of New Buddhist Movements Among Japanese Monks Returning from Song China Ōtsuka Norihiro 2 Conceptualizations of the Body and Medieval Buddhism: Five Organs Meditation, Spirits of the Dead, and Intra-uterine Theories Takahashi Yūsuke 3 Anti-Buddhist Arguments, Disputes on the Protection of the Dharma, and Theories on the Unity of the Three Teachings from the Seventeenth to Nineteenth Centuries Mori Kazuya 4 A Genealogy of Arguments Against Christianity in the Early Modern and Modern Periods Hazama Yoshiki 5 The Problem of National Religion and Modern Japan: The Formation and Development of the Shinto Shrines Neo-National Religion Theory Azegami Naoki