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Shinto and the State, 1868-1988
A01=Helen Hardacre
Apotheosis
Asceticism
Author_Helen Hardacre
Bhikkhu
Buddhism
Bureaucrat
Category=JP
Category=QRA
Christian mission
Christianity
Clergy
Confraternity
Confucianism
Definition of religion
Deity
Doctrine
Edo period
Emperor Meiji
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Freedom of religion
From Time Immemorial
Hegemony
Hikawa Shrine (Saitama)
Hirata Atsutane
Holy Synod
Home Ministry
Ideology
Imperial Rescript on Education
Inoue
Kokugakuin University
Kusunoki Masashige
Legitimation
Liturgy
Masato
Meiji Constitution
Meiji period
Meiji Restoration
Meiji Shrine
Missionary
Motoori Norinaga
National flag
National shrine
New religious movement
Nichiren
On Religion
Parish
Patriotism
Patronage
Persecution
Political culture
Politician
Politics
Promulgation
Proselytism
Protestantism
Religion
Religion in Japan
Religiosity
Religious organization
Rite
Schools of Buddhism
Sect
Shinbutsu bunri
Shrine
Sociology
State religion
Tax
Theocracy
Theology
Tutelary deity
Vestment
World War II
Yamabushi
Yasukuni Shrine
Product details
- ISBN 9780691020525
- Weight: 312g
- Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 01 Sep 1991
- Publisher: Princeton University Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
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Helen Hardacre, a leading scholar of religious life in modern Japan, examines the Japanese state's involvement in and manipulation of shinto from the Meiji Restoration to the present. Nowhere else in modern history do we find so pronounced an example of government sponsorship of a religion as in Japan's support of shinto. How did that sponsorship come about and how was it maintained? How was it dismantled after World War II? What attempts are being made today to reconstruct it? In answering these questions, Hardacre shows why State shinto symbols, such as the Yasukuni Shrine and its prefectural branches, are still the focus for bitter struggles over who will have the right to articulate their significance. Where previous studies have emphasized the state bureaucracy responsible for the administration of shinto, Hardacre goes to the periphery of Japanese society.
She demonstrates that leaders and adherents of popular religious movements, independent religious entrepreneurs, women seeking to raise the prestige of their households, and men with political ambitions all found an association with shinto useful for self-promotion; local-level civil administrations and parish organizations have consistently patronized shinto as a way to raise the prospects of provincial communities. A conduit for access to the prestige of the state, shinto has increased not only the power of the center of society over the periphery but also the power of the periphery over the center.
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