Yamashiro-no-kuni Nio Door That Was Open Is Now Sealed Again

Japanese Journal of Religious Studies

journal article

To Ise at All Costs: Religious and Economic Implications of Early Modern Nukemairi

Japanese Journal of Religious Studies

Published By: Nanzan University

Japanese Journal of Religious Studies

https://world wide web. jstor .org/stable/30233793

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Abstract

If pilgrimages are ideal platforms for contention, nowhere more than in early on modern nukemairi did tensions come up to the fore so prominently, and contrasting interests clash so stridently. This article looks at Edo-period (1600-1868) unauthorized pilgrimages to highlight the inherent disjunctions between the interests of the individual and those of the community, and between the priorities of faith and the practical necessities of the economy. It besides follows the development of nukemairi over time by looking at the repercussions that the fiscal reforms of the tardily eighteenth century had on the identification of travelers every bit "runaways."

Journal Information

A semi-annual periodical defended to the academic written report of Japanese religions. The JJRS publishes articles and materials that advance interreligious understanding and further the pursuit of knowledge in the study of religion, particularly Japanese religion. Ane of its functions is to interruption through the language barriers that separate Japanese scholarship in organized religion from the international scene. Commonly i of the two semi-annual issues is a special topical drove with invitee editors.

Publisher Information

Nanzan University is a private university located in Nagoya, a city in central Nihon. Founded in 1949 as part of the Nanzan Schoolhouse Corporation, the university promotes higher education especially in the Humanities and Social Sciences following its motto "Hominis Dignitati," "For the Dignity of Humankind." Since its foundation the university has placed special accent on the report of cultures and societies. To that purpose it has established its Anthropological Institute. The Establish promotes the written report of culture with a special involvement in religious traditions. The main focus of its research activities was originally Papua New Guinea and later on India, merely has now shifted to mainland Southeast Asia, Mainland china, and Nippon. The Institute, together with Nanzan University, develops scholarly commutation with academic institutions and scholars in Asia past offer facilities for research and written report to scholars and students, and by engaging in topic-focused inquiry projects.

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Source: https://www.jstor.org/stable/30233793

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