This article asks what religious violence is and why it is relevant. It questions common assumptions by focusing on how monastic violence unfolded in premodern Japan. It argues that there was nothing that set this particular form of violence apart in terms of what the clerics fought for, their ideological justification, who fought, or how they fought. Although myths prevail on the largely fictive figure of the sōhei, or “monk-warriors,” closer scrutiny indicates that their depiction first emerged as a coherent literary concept in the early Tokugawa period. Regarding the ideological framework in which incidents of so-called monastic violence took place, the paper demonstrates that the individuals involved in such conflicts—...
The focus of this Special Issue is on medieval Japanese religion. Although Kamakura “new” Buddhist s...
This article deals with developments of Shinto in the seventeenth century, focussing on the school o...
This essay examines Kuroda Toshio,s analysis of the concept of shinkoku (land of the kami) as it evo...
This article asks what religious violence is and why it is relevant. It questions common assumptions...
Presented at the Numata Conference in Buddhist Studies / “Violence, Nonviolence, and Japanese Religi...
This study reassesses the politics of religious institutions from the late medieval to the early Tok...
My dissertation focuses on the violence associated with two Korean Catholics from the late Chosŏn dy...
During the Tokugawa period, conflict within or between Buddhist groups was tightly controlled by the...
Despite the ubiquity of the Buddhist clergy in rural communities during the early modern period, the...
This study examines the history of the use of the Buddhist discourse of the four objects of indebted...
This dissertation is a critical history of Buddhist thought in Japan from 1868 to 1931. During this ...
The subject of this essay is the conflict that arose during the Bakumatsu period (mid-nineteenth cen...
The conversion of certain warlords in Kyushu, Japan, (1560–1580 CE) represents one of the most impor...
The purpose of this essay is to address four broad issues in regard to the study of the history of r...
In this essay, the religious aspect of the growing nationalism in Japanese society during the ea...
The focus of this Special Issue is on medieval Japanese religion. Although Kamakura “new” Buddhist s...
This article deals with developments of Shinto in the seventeenth century, focussing on the school o...
This essay examines Kuroda Toshio,s analysis of the concept of shinkoku (land of the kami) as it evo...
This article asks what religious violence is and why it is relevant. It questions common assumptions...
Presented at the Numata Conference in Buddhist Studies / “Violence, Nonviolence, and Japanese Religi...
This study reassesses the politics of religious institutions from the late medieval to the early Tok...
My dissertation focuses on the violence associated with two Korean Catholics from the late Chosŏn dy...
During the Tokugawa period, conflict within or between Buddhist groups was tightly controlled by the...
Despite the ubiquity of the Buddhist clergy in rural communities during the early modern period, the...
This study examines the history of the use of the Buddhist discourse of the four objects of indebted...
This dissertation is a critical history of Buddhist thought in Japan from 1868 to 1931. During this ...
The subject of this essay is the conflict that arose during the Bakumatsu period (mid-nineteenth cen...
The conversion of certain warlords in Kyushu, Japan, (1560–1580 CE) represents one of the most impor...
The purpose of this essay is to address four broad issues in regard to the study of the history of r...
In this essay, the religious aspect of the growing nationalism in Japanese society during the ea...
The focus of this Special Issue is on medieval Japanese religion. Although Kamakura “new” Buddhist s...
This article deals with developments of Shinto in the seventeenth century, focussing on the school o...
This essay examines Kuroda Toshio,s analysis of the concept of shinkoku (land of the kami) as it evo...