Shinto: A History

Front Cover
Oxford University Press, 2017 - History - 698 pages
Distinguished scholar of Japanese religions and culture Helen Hardacre offers the first comprehensive history of Shinto, the ancient and vibrant tradition whose colorful rituals are still practiced today. Under the ideal of Shinto, a divinely descended emperor governs through rituals offered to deities called Kami. These rituals are practiced in innumerable shrines across the realm, so that local rites mirror the monarch's ceremonies. Through this theatre of state, it is thought, the human, natural, and supernatural worlds will align in harmony and prosper.

Often called "the indigenous religion of Japan," Shinto's institutions, rituals, and symbols are omnipresent throughout the island nation. But, perhaps surprisingly, both its religiosity and its Japanese origins have been questioned. Hardacre investigates the claims about Shinto as the embodiment of indigenous tradition, and about its rightful place in the public realm. Shinto has often been represented in the West as the engine that drove Japanese military aggression. To this day, it is considered provocative for members of the government to visit the Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo, which honors the Japanese war dead, and this features as a source of strain in Japan's relations with China and Korea. The Yasukuni Shrine is a debated issue in Japanese national politics and foreign relations and reliably attracts intensive media coverage. Hardacre contends, controversially, that it was the Allied Occupation that created this stereotype of Shinto as the religion of war, when in fact virtually all branches of Japanese religions were cheerleaders for the war and imperialism.

The history and nature of Shinto are subjects of vital importance for understanding contemporary Japan, its politics, its international relations, and its society. Hardacre's magisterial work will stand as the definitive reference for years to come.

 

Contents

Introduction
1
1 Shinto in the Ancient Period
17
2 The Kami in Myth
47
3 The Coalescence of Early Shinto
71
4 Shinto during the Middle and Late Heian Period Tenth through Twelfth Centuries
109
5 The Esotericization of Medieval Shinto
147
6 Medieval Shinto and the Arts
177
7 The Late Medieval Period
207
13 Shinto and Imperial Japan
403
14 Shinto from 1945 through 1989
441
15 Shrine Festivals and Their Changing Place in the Public Sphere
475
16 Heisei Shinto
509
Shrine Funding
551
Selected List of Characters
557
Chronology
573
Abbreviations
587

8 Early EdoPeriod Shinto Thought and Institutions
235
9 EdoPeriod Shrine Life and Shrine Pilgrimage
263
10 Shinto and Revelation
299
11 Shinto and Kokugaku
323
12 Shinto and the Meiji State
355
Notes
589
Bibliography
659
Index
681
Copyright

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About the author (2017)

Helen Hardacre is Reischauer Institute Professor of Japanese Religions and Society at Harvard University. Concentrating on Japanese religious history of the modern period, she has done extended field study of contemporary Shinto and Buddhist religious organizations, the religious life of Japan's Korean minority, and contemporary ritualization of abortion. She has also researched State Shinto and directs a research project on constitutional revision in Japan.

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