Constructing Identities through the Shikoku Pilgrimage

IF 0.3 3区 哲学 0 RELIGION
I. Reader
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The Shikoku pilgrimage has, until very recently, seen significant growth in pilgrim numbers and appears, as such, to provide a counter-example to the general trend evident in surveys and studies of declining engagement in religious practices in Japan. However, two caveats are needed here: numbers have started to fall in the last decade, and those doing the pilgrimage have often in recent times viewed their pilgrimages as journeys of self-discovery in which identity is paramount and faith is irrelevant or explicitly denied. In addition, the pilgrimage has been promoted by secular authorities as a signifier of regional and national cultural identity in order to develop Shikoku as a tourist destination, and boost the local economy. In this article, I explore these issues, drawing on fieldwork in Shikoku between 1984 and 2019 and on interviews with people—from pilgrims on foot to temple priests to regional government officials—involved in various ways with the pilgrimage. In discussing how identity construction is both a major factor in the motives of pilgrims and an aim of secular agencies seeking to promote the pilgrimage for nonreligious reasons, I examine what this means for studies of religion today through highlighting recent Japanese theoretical examinations of religion, pilgrimage, and tourism while discussing how the Shikoku example both fits with and provides critical counterarguments to their studies.
从四国朝圣看身份认同的建构
直到最近,四国朝圣的朝圣者人数一直在显著增长,因此,似乎为调查和研究中显示的日本宗教活动减少的总体趋势提供了一个反例。然而,这里有两点需要注意:在过去的十年里,朝圣的人数开始下降,而那些朝圣的人最近常常把他们的朝圣视为自我发现的旅程,在这个旅程中,身份是至高无上的,信仰是无关紧要的,或者是被明确否认的。此外,为了将四国发展为旅游目的地,并促进当地经济,朝圣活动已被世俗当局作为区域和国家文化认同的象征加以推广。在这篇文章中,我利用1984年至2019年在四国的田野调查,以及对以各种方式参与朝圣的人(从徒步朝圣者到寺庙牧师到地方政府官员)的采访,探讨了这些问题。在讨论身份建构如何既是朝圣者动机的主要因素,又是世俗机构寻求促进非宗教原因的朝圣的目的时,我通过强调最近日本对宗教、朝圣和旅游的理论考察,同时讨论四国的例子如何与他们的研究相适应,并为他们的研究提供了关键的反驳,来研究这对今天的宗教研究意味着什么。
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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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
10
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊介绍: The Japanese Journal of Religious Studies is a peer-reviewed journal registered as an Open Access Journal with all content freely downloadable. The journal began in 1960 as Contemporary Religions in Japan, which was changed to the JJRS in 1974. It has been published by the Nanzan Institute since 1981. The JJRS aims for a multidisciplinary approach to the study of religion in Japan, and submissions are welcomed from scholars in all fields of the humanities and social sciences. To submit a manuscript or inquiry about publishing in our journal, please contact us at the address below.
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