격이 다른 오디오북 생활을 경험해보세요!
Helen Hardacre, a leading scholar of religious life in modern Japan, examines the Japanese state's involvement in and manipulation of shinto from the Meiji Restoration to the present. Nowhere else in modern history do we find so pronounced an example of government sponsorship of a religion as in Japan's support of shinto. How did that sponsorship come about and how was it maintained? How was it dismantled after World War II? What attempts are being made today to reconstruct it? In answering these questions, Hardacre shows why State shinto symbols, such as the Yasukuni Shrine and its prefectural branches, are still the focus for bitter struggles over who will have the right to articulate their significance.
Where previous studies have emphasized the state bureaucracy responsible for the administration of shinto, Hardacre goes to the periphery of Japanese society. She demonstrates that leaders and adherents of popular religious movements, independent religious entrepreneurs, women seeking to raise the prestige of their households, and men with political ambitions all found an association with shinto useful for self-promotion; local-level civil administrations and parish organizations have consistently patronized shinto as a way to raise the prospects of provincial communities. A conduit for access to the prestige of the state, shinto has increased not only the power of the center of society over the periphery but also the power of the periphery over the center.
© 2020 Princeton University Press (전자책 ): 9780691221298
출시일
전자책 : 2020년 11월 10일
국내 유일 해리포터 시리즈 오디오북
5만권이상의 영어/한국어 오디오북
키즈 모드(어린이 안전 환경)
월정액 무제한 청취
언제든 취소 및 해지 가능
오프라인 액세스를 위한 도서 다운로드
친구 또는 가족과 함께 오디오북을 즐기고 싶은 분들을 위해
2-3 계정
무제한 청취
2-3 계정
무제한 청취
언제든 해지하실 수 있어요
2 개 계정
17900 원 /월한국어
대한민국