Ebook: Early Kamakura Buddhism: A Minority Report
Author: Robert E. Morrell
- Genre: Religion // Buddhism
- Year: 1987
- Publisher: Asian Humanities Press
- Language: English
- pdf
Nanzan Studies in Religion & Culture
Our view of Kamakura Buddhism rests largely on interpretations by the heirs of its successful innovatorsthe Zen, Nichiren, and Pure Land movementswhile the Establishment is represented merely as the hostile background against which our currently accepted heroes of the age had to struggle to create their brave new world.
In this “minority report,” four leaders of the traditional older sects are given an opportunity to present their side: Tendai’s Jien, Hossō’s Jōkei, Kegon’s Myōe, and Shingon’s Kakukailargely through selected translations of their writings, and other contemporary accounts. Students of history, literature, and religion are invited to reexamine this critical period in the story of Japanese religion from a new perspective.
In this clear and carefully documented work, Morrell gives us a glimpse of the ‘other side’ to the spirituality of Kamakura Buddhism. It makes fascinating reading for a broad range of readers: historians, literature scholars, and buddhologists.
Alan Miller
Morrell’s book shows a rare command of both the Buddhist textual and literary traditions..
Martin Collcut
Our view of Kamakura Buddhism rests largely on interpretations by the heirs of its successful innovatorsthe Zen, Nichiren, and Pure Land movementswhile the Establishment is represented merely as the hostile background against which our currently accepted heroes of the age had to struggle to create their brave new world.
In this “minority report,” four leaders of the traditional older sects are given an opportunity to present their side: Tendai’s Jien, Hossō’s Jōkei, Kegon’s Myōe, and Shingon’s Kakukailargely through selected translations of their writings, and other contemporary accounts. Students of history, literature, and religion are invited to reexamine this critical period in the story of Japanese religion from a new perspective.
In this clear and carefully documented work, Morrell gives us a glimpse of the ‘other side’ to the spirituality of Kamakura Buddhism. It makes fascinating reading for a broad range of readers: historians, literature scholars, and buddhologists.
Alan Miller
Morrell’s book shows a rare command of both the Buddhist textual and literary traditions..
Martin Collcut
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