skip navigation

Chinese & Japanese Traditions

Death, Burial, and the Study of Contemporary Japanese Buddhism

By Mark Rowe, McMaster University (December 2008)


Section: Chinese & Japanese Traditions

Subjects: Japanese Religious Traditions, Buddhism, Religion.

Places: Asia, Japan, Eastern Asia.

Key Topics: death, funerals.

Abstract

This article approaches mortuary practices as a window into the current state of Japanese Buddhism. Despite widespread scholarly awareness of the intimate connection between Buddhism and death throughout much of Japanese history, to date little work has been done to explore the profound significance of changing burial practices on all of the major sects today. Making the argument that ‘funerary Buddhism’ (sōshiki Bukkyō) is important to both think about and think with, this article provides an overview of funerary culture in Japan and reflects upon what contemporary changes to that culture tell us about Japanese Buddhism.

DOI: 10.1111/j.1749-8171.2008.00118.x

This article abstract has been viewed 1800 times.

view cite Add to my Compass

Add to VLE/CMS feedback


Top 5 related articles

Top 5 Related Blackwell Reference Chapters

Quick Search

Related Blackwell Reference Chapters

Religion Compass - Personal Subscription Rates

Indexed by:

Atlas company logo
Religious Exchange Forum banner
 
[ access key 0 : accessibility information including access key list ] [ access key 1 : home page ] [ access key 2 : skip navigation] [ access key 6 : help ]