Buddhist Culture in Early Modern Japan

Nam‐lin Hur
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Abstract

Buddhist culture was most active and prosperous in early modern Japan (1600–1868). Buddhist temples were ubiquitous throughout the country, and no one was untouched by Buddhism. Buddhist priests wielded considerable power over the populace, and Shinto was largely subject to Buddhist control. Buddhist culture attained this considerable influence in early modern Japan through the performance of death-related rituals and prayer. Death-related rituals (also known as funerary Buddhism) were rooted in the nationwide anti-Christian policy of the Tokugawa bakufu that utilized the administrative machinery of Buddhist temples. Using the opportunity provided by the anti-Christian policy, Buddhist temples were able to bind all households to death-related rituals and this, in turn, gave rise to the danka system in which dying a Buddhist soon became the norm in early modern Japan. Given the rigid social status, mutual surveillance, and highly regulated nature of everyday life in Tokugawa Japan, people through prayer often turned to Buddhist deities to seek divine help for their wishes or ad hoc solutions to worldly problems. Beyond being sites of prayer services, Buddhist temples also served as spaces of learning, relief, and/or leisure, thus catering to people from all walks of life. Both prayer and play were also integral to Buddhist culture in early modern Japanese society.
近代早期日本的佛教文化
佛教文化在近代日本早期(1600-1868)最为活跃和繁荣。佛教寺庙遍布全国,没有一个人不受佛教的影响。佛教僧侣对民众拥有相当大的权力,神道教在很大程度上受佛教控制。通过与死亡有关的仪式和祈祷,佛教文化在近代早期的日本获得了相当大的影响。与死亡有关的仪式(也被称为丧葬佛教)植根于德川幕府的全国性反基督教政策,该政策利用了佛教寺庙的管理机制。利用反基督教政策提供的机会,佛教寺庙能够将所有家庭与死亡相关的仪式捆绑在一起,这反过来又产生了丹卡制度,在这种制度下,佛教徒的死亡很快成为近代早期日本的规范。鉴于日本德川地区严格的社会地位、相互监督和高度规范的日常生活性质,人们经常通过祈祷向佛教神灵寻求神的帮助,以实现他们的愿望或对世俗问题的临时解决方案。除了作为祈祷场所之外,佛教寺庙还作为学习、救济和/或休闲的空间,从而迎合了各行各业的人们。在近代早期的日本社会中,祈祷和玩耍也是佛教文化不可或缺的一部分。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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