List of Illustrations vi
Conventions and Abbreviations Used in the Text vii
Prologue ix
1 An Alternative Approach to the History of Shinto 1
2 Kami Shrines, Myths, and Rituals in Premodern Times 24
3 The History of a Shrine: Hie 66
4 The History of a Myth: The Sun-Goddess and the Rock-Cave 129
5 The Daijōsai: A “Shinto” Rite of Imperial Accession 168
6 Issues in Contemporary Shinto 199
Conclusion 221
Notes 229
References 242
Index 253
John Breen is Reader in Japanese at SOAS (University of London) and Associate Professor at the International Research Centre for Japanese Studies in Kyoto, where he edits the journal Japan Review. His publications include Yasukuni, the War Dead and the Struggle for Japan’s Past (edited, 2008), Inoue Nobutaka, Shintō: A Short History (translated and adapted with Mark Teeuwen, 2002), Shintō in History: Ways of the Kami (edited with Mark Teeuwen, 2000), and Japan and Christianity: Impacts and Responses, (edited with Mark Williams, 1996).
Mark Teeuwen is Professor of Japanese Studies at the University of Oslo. As well as the books authored and edited with John Breen, he is co-editor of Buddhas and Kami in Japan: Honji Suijaku as a Combinatory Paradigm (with Fabio Rambelli, 2003) and The Culture of Secrecy in Japanese Religion (with Bernhard Scheid, 2006).
“It is a measure of the book’s achievement that it has managed to
introduce such scholarly notions in a way that is at once
accessible and instructive. Even those skeptical about its
claims would have to admit the solidity of the research, and the
book renders valuable service by opening up debate about Shinto’s
origins to a general readership. Its influence is likely to be long
lasting.” (Japan Review, 2012) "Breen and Teeuwen offer a
postmodern, historical exposition of Shinto. In addition to
independent research, they draw on a wide field of contemporary
Japanese Shinto studies . . . The book is thus not only a result of
solid academic work-it is also an ambitious political assessment."
(Japanese Journal of Religious Studies, 2010) "But for
anyone interested in Shinto studies, religion and nationalism, and
the contested and ever-changing nature of religious traditions,
this is an essential read." (Religious Studies Review, 1 March
2011) "Written by two scholars at the forefront of the study of
Japanese religions, this book offers much more than a ‘brief
history’. It is in fact a very bold and lucid attempt to redraw the
parameters that govern our understanding of that elusive body of
thought and practice we call Shinto … This book will surprise and
on occasion shock; it will surely be required reading for all those
interested in Japan and the Japanese."
--Richard Bowring, Professor of Japanese Studies, University of
Cambridge
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