Shintō and the state, 1868-1988 /
Explores church/state question in Japan. Focuses on the ordinary people whose lives are affected by the ongoing struggle of the Japanese to define their national character and policy.
Үндсэн зохиолч: | |
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Формат: | Licensed eBooks |
Хэл сонгох: | англи |
Хэвлэсэн: |
Princeton, N.J. :
Princeton University Press
©1989.
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Цуврал: | Studies in church and state.
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Онлайн хандалт: | https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2307/j.ctv173dzxb |
Агуулга:
- Studies of State Shinto
- Issues, Themes, and Goals
- Shinto in the Tokugawa Era (1600-1868)
- The Relation between Buddhism and Shinto
- Ise Pilgrimage
- The Influence of National Learning
- The Modern History of Relations Between Shinto and the State
- The Meiji Restoration and the Beginning of State Shinto
- The Separation of Buddhism from Shinto
- Building Institutions
- Disunity in the Department of Divinity
- Reform of Imperial Ritual
- The Creation of National Rites and Ceremonies
- The Slump of Middle Meiji (1880-1905)
- Is Shinto a Religion?
- The Movement to Reestablish the Department of Divinity
- Shrine Building after the Russo-Japanese War
- Freedom of Religion
- Postwar Shinto
- The Great Promulgation Campaign
- The Campaign
- The Pantheon Dispute
- The New Religions in the Great Promulgation Campaign
- The Shinto Priesthood
- The Internal Diversity of the Shinto Priesthood
- The Evolution of a Concept of Religion
- Shrine Administrators
- The Idea of a National Teaching
- Shrine Administrators' Diversity and Influence
- National Teaching in Practice
- Questions of Doctrine and Rites
- The Provincial Priesthood
- Shrines and the Rites of Empire Part I: Shinto Shrines
- The Separation of Buddhism from Shinto
- Shrine Registration
- Shrine Rankings
- Distribution of Ise Talismans and Almanacs
- The Ise Shrines and Their Outposts
- The State-Sponsored Cult of the War Dead and Loyalists
- Provincial Centers of the Cult of the War Dead
- The Meiji Shrine
- Shrines in the Colonies.