Interpreting Amida : history and Orientalism in the study of Pure Land Buddhism

Bibliographic Information

Interpreting Amida : history and Orientalism in the study of Pure Land Buddhism

Galen Amstutz

(SUNY series in Buddhist studies)

State University of New York Press, c1997

  • : pbk

Available at  / 31 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Bibliography: p. 209-240

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Pure Land Buddhism was the largest traditional religion in Japan. It had an enormous impact on Japanese culture and was among the first forms of Buddhism encountered by Western culture. Not only has it been neglected in modern descriptions of Japan, but it also has been relatively ignored by Buddhist studies. The author shows that Pure Land Buddhism, despite a Mahayana Buddhist philosophical basis, has paralleled the social and political qualities associated with the Judeo-Christian tradition. It has variously been threatening to mainstream Westerners, uninteresting to Westerners seeking the exotic, and disagreeable to cultural brokers on all sides who want to depict Japanese culture as radically opposed to the West. The faulty appreciation of Pure Land Buddhism is one of the leading world examples of a counterproductive orientalism that restricts rather than improves cross-cultural communication.

Table of Contents

Preface: Shin Buddhism and Orientalist Interpretation 1. Background: Pure Land Buddhism from India to the Modern Period 2. Modernization 3. Interpreting Pure Land Buddhism before the Nineteenth Century 4. Interpreting Pure Land from the 1870s through World War II 5. Interpreting Pure Land in the Postwar Period 6. Interpreting Pure Land in the Future: A Concluding Prognosis Appendix: Other Missionaries' and Outside Observers' Reports on Shin in the Late Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries Notes Bibliography Index

by "Nielsen BookData"

Related Books: 1-1 of 1

Details

Page Top