秋天之后

IF 0.6 0 RELIGION
J. Shields
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引用次数: 0

摘要

Tsuji Zennosuke(1877-1955)是20世纪30年代至50年代中期日本佛教历史学术的主要人物,众所周知,为了对他的主题进行全面的分析,他使用了广泛的资料来源。本文将从国家历史研究(kokushigaku)和所谓的国家历史研究(kokka shint)的出现来考察Tsuji的佛教史概念,并反对Tsuji作为抵制历史学术中民族主义趋势的“客观历史学家”的形象。事实上,Tsuji参与了另一种“佛教”国家历史的创造,或bukkyōshugi。特别地,除了他对佛教对日本领导人(包括皇帝和军事军阀)的人道主义精神的贡献的更一般的概念之外,还将Tsuji的佛教概念与早期的新佛教(新佛教)和大佛教的论点进行了比较。是否有——是否应该有——宗教的客观历史?神圣的历史,尤其是佛教的历史,对日本这个新兴的“现代”国家有什么意义?佛教,一个泛亚洲的“借来的宗教”,如何与民族独特性的“日本主义”意识形态相适应?这些都是Tsuji在他的作品中提出的一些问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
After the Fall
Tsuji Zennosuke 辻善之助 (1877–1955), the dominant figure in Buddhist historical scholarship in Japan from the 1930s until the mid-1950s, is known to have employed a broad range of sources in order to provide a comprehensive analysis of his subject. This essay examines Tsuji’s conception of Buddhist history in relation to the emergence of both National Historical Studies (kokushigaku 国史学) and so-called State Shintō (kokka shintō 国家神道) and argues against the image of Tsuji as an “objective historian” resistant to nationalist trends in historical scholarship. In fact, Tsuji was involved in the creation of an alternative, “Buddhistic” national history, or bukkyōshugi kokushi 仏教主義国史的. In particular, comparisons are drawn between Tsuji’s conception of Buddhism and the earlier arguments of New Buddhism (shin bukkyō 新仏教) and the Daijō hi-bussetsuron 大乗非仏説論, in addition to his more general conception of the contributions of Buddhism to the humanitarian spirit of Japanese leaders—both emperors and military warlords. Can there be—should there be—an objective history of religion? What is the significance of sacred history—and the history of Buddhism more particularly—to the still-emerging “modern” nation of Japan? How does Buddhism, a pan-Asian and “borrowed religion,” fit with the “Japanist” ideology of national uniqueness? These are some of the questions posed by Tsuji in his writings.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
33.30%
发文量
6
期刊介绍: JRJ is committed to an approach based on religious studies, and is open to contributions coming from different disciplines, such as anthropology, sociology, history, Buddhist studies, Japanese studies, art history, and area studies. The Journal of Religion in Japan encourages critical application of ideas and theories about Japanese religions and constitutes a forum for new theoretical developments in the field of religion in Japan. The Journal does not provide a venue for inter-religious dialogue and confessional approaches.
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