Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 2000 27/3-4 Mortuary Rites in Japan Editors,Introduction (original) (raw)

Mortuary Rites in Japan Editors' Introduction

Elizabeth Kenney

2000

View PDFchevron_right

Death, Burial, and the Study of Contemporary Japanese Buddhism

Mark Rowe

Religion Compass, 2009

View PDFchevron_right

Review: Mark Rowe, Bonds of the Dead: Temples, Burial, and the Transformation of Contemporary Japanese Buddhism. Chicago, University of Chicago Press (2011). xv+258 pp., US $29 (paper), ISBN 9780226730158. (PDF: see link.)

Nicolas Sihlé

Religion 43(2): 284-287, 2013

View PDFchevron_right

Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 2000 27/3-4 Stand By Your Founder Honganji,s Struggle with Funeral Orthodoxy

Mark L. Blum

2015

View PDFchevron_right

Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 2000 27/3-4 Shinto Funerals in the Edo Period

Elizabeth Kenney

2015

View PDFchevron_right

Bonds of the Dead: Temples, Burial, and the Transformation of Contemporary Japanese Buddhism

Mark Rowe

Asian Studies Review, 2013

View PDFchevron_right

Agency and the Personalization of the Grave in Japan

Sébastien Penmellen P BORET

2017

View PDFchevron_right

The Material Culture of Death in Medieval Japan - By Karen M. Gerhart

Jacqueline Stone

Religious Studies Review, 2011

View PDFchevron_right

The Structure of Japanese Buddhist Funerals

Mariko N Walter

University of Hawaii Press eBooks, 2008

View PDFchevron_right

HIKARU SUZUKI: The price of death: The funeral industry in contemporary Japan. xi, 266 pp. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. 2000. £25

Christopher Thompson

Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, 2002

View PDFchevron_right

Robert Hertz’s seminal essay and mortuary rites in the Pacific region

Eric Venbrux

Journal de la Société des Océanistes, 2007

View PDFchevron_right

Mortification Practices in the Japanese Obaku School

James Baskind

View PDFchevron_right

Creative Destruction—The Shattering of the Family Grave System in Japan

Natacha Aveline-Dubach

Invisible Population—The Place of the Dead In East Asian Megacities (Editor: N. Aveline-Dubach), 2014

View PDFchevron_right

Continuity and change: Funeral customs in modern Japan

Hirochika Nakamaki

Japanese Journal of Religious Studies

View PDFchevron_right

Gerhart, The Material Culture of Death in Medieval Japan (review)

Hank Glassman

View PDFchevron_right

Stickers for Nails: The Ongoing Transformation of Roles, Rites, and Symbols in Japanese Funerals

Mark Rowe

Japanese Journal of Religious Studies, 2000

View PDFchevron_right

Changing relationship between the dead and the living in Japanese prehistory

Naoko Matsumoto

Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 2018

View PDFchevron_right

Cremation in Japan : bone Buddhas and surrogate bodies

Mary PICONE

Etudes sur la mort, 2007

View PDFchevron_right

Book Review: Bonds of the Dead: Temples, Burial, and the Transformation of Contemporary Japanese Buddhism: Bonds of the Dead: Temples, Burial, and the Transformation of Contemporary Japanese Buddhism. By Mark Rowe . Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2011. xv, 258 pp. 91.00(cloth);91.00 (cloth); 91.00(cloth);29.00 (p...

Raji Steineck

2017

View PDFchevron_right

The Place of Veneration in Buddhist Mortuary Sites

Lars Fogelin

Oxford Handbook for the Archaeology of Death and Burial (eds. S. Tarlow and L. Nilsson-Stutz), 2013

View PDFchevron_right

Death and Social Order in Tokugawa Japan: Buddhism, Anti-Christianity, and the Danka System. By Nam-lin Hur. Harvard University Asia Center2007. Pp. 409. $55.00. ISBN: 0-067-40253-2

Steven Heine

The journal of law and religion, 2008

View PDFchevron_right

Forgotten Visions of the Afterlife: Nineteenth Century Posthumous Votive Portraiture in Iwate, Japan, Rediscovered

Christopher Thompson

Journal of Religion and Popular Culture, 2010

View PDFchevron_right

“Devotion in Flesh and Bone: The Mummified Corpses of Mount Yudono Ascetics in the Edo Period.”

Andrea Castiglioni

Asian Ethnology, 2019

View PDFchevron_right

Becoming Kami? Discourse on Postmortem Ritual Deification in the Ryukyus

Evgeny Baksheev

Japan Review N20, Р.275-339, Kyoto: International Research Center for Japanese Studies, 2008

View PDFchevron_right

Editors' Introduction: Towards an Archaeology of Japanese Ritual and Religion

Mark Hudson

View PDFchevron_right

Practicing the Afterlife: Perspectives from Japan (review)

Hank Glassman

The Journal of Japanese Studies, 2006

View PDFchevron_right

Review of: Sébastien Penmellen Boret, Japanese Tree Burial: Ecology, Kinship and the Culture of Death

Sébastien Penmellen P BORET

Japanese Journal of Religious Studies, 2015

View PDFchevron_right

Shinto Funerals in the Edo Period

Elizabeth Kenney

View PDFchevron_right

Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 1986 13/4 Religious Rites in a Japanese Factory

David C Lewis

2015

View PDFchevron_right

Stand by your founder: Honganji's struggle with funeral orthodoxy

mark blum

Japanese journal of religious studies, 2000

View PDFchevron_right

Death Cannot be Seen: The Mortuary Rites of a Contemporary Monastic

Mingqian Xu

Journal of Daesoon Thought and the Religions of East Asia , 2024

View PDFchevron_right

Editors’ Introduction: Modest Materialities: The Social Lives and Afterlives of Sacred Things in Japan

Caroline Hirasawa

Japanese Journal of Religious Studies, 2018

View PDFchevron_right

4. The Secret Art of Dying Esoteric Deathbed Practices in Heian Japan

Jacqueline Stone

2017

View PDFchevron_right

The Practice of Religion in Japan: An Exploration of the State of the Field.

Lucia Dolce

In Handbook of Modern Japanese Studies, J. Babb ed., Sage, 2015. (Reprint, with amendments and photos, of the Introduction to Japanese Religions, Sage Major Works, 4 vols, L. Dolce, ed., 2012, vol. 1, pp. xix-lvii).

View PDFchevron_right

Japanese Journal of Religions Studies 1992 L9/4 Ancestral to None

Doris G Bargen

2015

View PDFchevron_right