Spirits and Animism in Contemporary Japan: The Invisible Empire
Editat de Professor Fabio Rambellien Limba Engleză Hardback – mai 2019
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781350097094
ISBN-10: 1350097098
Pagini: 240
Ilustrații: 20 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.52 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1350097098
Pagini: 240
Ilustrații: 20 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.52 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Brings together approaches from religious studies, intellectual history, literature, art and architecture, film and media studies
Notă biografică
Fabio Rambelli is Professor of Japanese Religions and International Shinto Foundation Endowed Chair in Shinto Studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara, USA. He is series editor of Bloomsbury Shinto Studies, and his publications include The Sea and the Sacred in Japan (Bloomsbury, 2018) and A Buddhist Theory of Semiotics (2013).
Cuprins
List of Figures List of Contributors Introduction: The Invisible Empire: Spirits and Animism in Contemporary Japan, Fabio Rambelli (University of California, Santa Barbara, USA)1. The Dead Who Remain: Spirits and Changing Views of the Afterlife,Sato Hiroo (Tohoku University in Sendai, Japan) translation by Emily B. Simpson (University of California, Santa Barbara, USA)2. The Mystical "Occident" or the Vibrations of "Modernity" in the Mirror of Japanese Thought, Jason A. Josephson-Storm (Williams College, USA)3. A Metaphysics of the Invisible Realm: Minakata Kumagusu on Spirits, Molds, and the Cosmic Mandala, Fabio Rambelli (University of California, Santa Barbara, USA)4. New Religious Movements, the Media, and "Japanese Animism", Ioannis Gaitanidis (Chiba University, Japan)5. Animated City: Life Force, Guardians, and Contemporary Architecture in Kyoto, Ellen Van Goethem (Kyushu University, Japan)6. Essays in Vagueness: Aspects of Diffused Religiosity in Japan, Carina Roth (University of Geneva, Switzerland)7. Came Back Hounded: A Spectrum of Experiences with Spirits and Inugami Possession in Contemporary Japan, Andrea De Antoni (Ritsumeikan University, Japan)8. The Spirit(s) of Modern Japanese Fiction, Rebecca Suter (University of Sydney, Australia)9. Techno-Animism: Japanese Media Artists and their Buddhist and Shinto Legacy, Mauro Arrighi (Independent Scholar, Japan)10. Spirit/Medium Critically Examining the Relationship between Animism and Animation, Jolyon Baraka Thomas (University of Pennsylvania, USA)11. From Your Name to Shin-Gojira: Spiritual Crisscrossing, Spatial Soteriology, and Catastrophic Identity in Contemporary Japanese Visual Culture,Andrea Castiglioni (University of California, Berkeley, USA)Notes Bibliography Index
Recenzii
[The] diversity of approaches and subjects in Spirits and Animism render "visible" the complexities of an invisible realmin ways that will excite scholars and students of Japanese religions and entice those working in comparative fields.
Brings together research from many promising young researchers who take a fresh look at the role of religion (in this case focusing on "spirits") in modern and contemporary Japanese society.
Overall, this book is interesting and well worth reading.
For those interested in this sub-field of studies and Japanese religions in general, this book will certainly represent a valuable source and suggest new avenues for further research.
In recent years, debates about the use of the term 'animism' have resurfaced as the ontological turn has reinvigorated the concept. This timely and diverse collection of essays contributes to these conversations by interrogating how the concepts of animism and spirits have been deployed in modern and contemporary Japan.
This thoughtful collection of essays explores ideas and representations about 'spirits' and discourses about animism in modern and contemporary Japan by offering original and thought-provoking contributions. Highly recommended.
This is an important, timely, and very rich volume. The authors critically examine modern uses of the term "animism" in Japan, analyse various types of spirit belief in their historical contexts, and offer compelling new interpretations of popular culture, from anime to forest therapy. A much-needed respite from the numerous essentialist celebrations of Japanese "Shinto animism" in recent academic and media discourse.
This is a fascinating collection of perspectives on the place of 'spirit' in modern and contemporary Japan, produced by some of the top scholars in the field. It offers a balance of breadth and nuance that guarantees something of interest for specialists and non-specialists alike. We come away with a vivid, unforgettable sense of how spirit pervades Japanese life - bringing meaning and energy to such diverse areas of life as family, relationships, war, commerce, art, memory, the environment, and people's sense of hope or dread about the future. A real treat.
Brings together research from many promising young researchers who take a fresh look at the role of religion (in this case focusing on "spirits") in modern and contemporary Japanese society.
Overall, this book is interesting and well worth reading.
For those interested in this sub-field of studies and Japanese religions in general, this book will certainly represent a valuable source and suggest new avenues for further research.
In recent years, debates about the use of the term 'animism' have resurfaced as the ontological turn has reinvigorated the concept. This timely and diverse collection of essays contributes to these conversations by interrogating how the concepts of animism and spirits have been deployed in modern and contemporary Japan.
This thoughtful collection of essays explores ideas and representations about 'spirits' and discourses about animism in modern and contemporary Japan by offering original and thought-provoking contributions. Highly recommended.
This is an important, timely, and very rich volume. The authors critically examine modern uses of the term "animism" in Japan, analyse various types of spirit belief in their historical contexts, and offer compelling new interpretations of popular culture, from anime to forest therapy. A much-needed respite from the numerous essentialist celebrations of Japanese "Shinto animism" in recent academic and media discourse.
This is a fascinating collection of perspectives on the place of 'spirit' in modern and contemporary Japan, produced by some of the top scholars in the field. It offers a balance of breadth and nuance that guarantees something of interest for specialists and non-specialists alike. We come away with a vivid, unforgettable sense of how spirit pervades Japanese life - bringing meaning and energy to such diverse areas of life as family, relationships, war, commerce, art, memory, the environment, and people's sense of hope or dread about the future. A real treat.