Renegade Monk : Hōnen and Japanese Pure Land Buddhism

Bibliographic Information

Renegade Monk : Hōnen and Japanese Pure Land Buddhism

Soho Machida ; translated and edited by Ioannis Mentzas

University of California Press, c1999

Other Title

法然 : 世紀末の革命者

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Note

"Hōnen : Seikimatsu no kakumeisha (Hōnen : Revolutionary in an Eschatological Era), was published by Hōzōkan in 1997 ・・・ This English version expands further on that Japanese volume."--Acknowledgments

Glossary in Japanese

Includes bibliographical references (p. 187-191) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The Pure Land sect of Japanese Buddhism is one of the strongest Buddhist sects in Japan, with three and a half million followers. In this book, Soho Machida provides the first detailed, objective account in English of the life and thought of its founder, Honenbo Genku (1133-1212), known as Honen. Opening with the destruction and chaos that beleaguered Kyoto during Honen's lifetime, Soho Machida explores Honen's social context to discover the roots of his thought and the source of his popularity. The Old Buddhist regime had a stranglehold on peasants, he shows, by concocting images of vindictive spirits, hell, and an apocalyptic collapse of the law in these chaotic times. Machida asserts that when Honen countered such negative, menacing images by focusing his imagination on the Pure Land and actually affirming death, he became not only a radical thinker but also the leader of a revolutionary social movement - a medieval Japanese "liberation theology." Clearly argued and informed by contemporary Western theory, this book will become the definitive source on Honen's life and thought for decades to come.

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