Shinra Myōjin and Buddhist Networks of the East Asian ""Mediterranean

Author:   Sujung Kim
Publisher:   University of Hawai'i Press
ISBN:  

9780824888442


Pages:   194
Publication Date:   30 November 2020
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Shinra Myōjin and Buddhist Networks of the East Asian ""Mediterranean


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Author:   Sujung Kim
Publisher:   University of Hawai'i Press
Imprint:   University of Hawai'i Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.70cm , Length: 22.60cm
Weight:   0.300kg
ISBN:  

9780824888442


ISBN 10:   0824888448
Pages:   194
Publication Date:   30 November 2020
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Reviews

As this study shows, Shinra Myōjin is an extremely complex and enigmatic figure. By placing this deity in the context of the various, often overlapping, economic, political and cultural networks, Kim has succeeded in providing us with both a rich and nuanced view of the various roles played by Shinra Myōjin and new insights into the ways in which the religious imagination functioned in medieval Japan. It is without doubt an exciting new addition to the scholarly literature on Japanese religions.--Robert F. Rhodes, Otani University, Kyoto ""Journal of Religion in Japan, 10:1 (March 2021)"" Indeed, Kim shows us how consideration of a particular deity can revolutionize the history of a particular sect, as the Tendai Jimon have been vastly understudied when compared to the Tendai Sanmon. Her monograph also demonstrates how multidisciplinary approaches can provide useful tools for considering topics in which source material is sparse . . . [T]he text is invaluable to scholars of Japanese religions in adding complexity and richness to the medieval religious landscape, acknowledging and exploring the networks of the East Asian Mediterranean, and contributing to our growing knowledge of the role of deities in Japanese religious history.--Emily B. Simpson, Dartmouth College ""Journal of Asian Humanities at Kyushu University, Vol. 6 (2021)"" Kim's approach to presenting the development of the character of Shinra Myōjin in Japanese religious lore is equally innovative and fascinating. She challenges the customary notion concerning this widely worshipped divinity that he was a Korean deity who simply decided to move over to Japan in order to protect a Japanese Buddhist tradition. Instead, Kim takes pains to reveal ""the sociocultural and mythological networks within which this deity was embedded."" Furthermore, she maintains that this network ought to be conceived as being beyond the national and cultural boundaries of Korea and Japan.--Lehel Balogh, Hokkaido University ""Religious Studies Review, 46:4 (December 2020)"" Kim's maritime approach takes a bold stand in its refusal to read modern, national boundaries, and the geopolitical borders and institutional parameters of Asian Studies, onto the complexities of a rich sociocultural network that spanned seas, transcended languages, and spread across vast distances. . . . [Her] work takes a transcultural and interdisciplinary approach that should be of interest to any scholar, regardless of discipline, who is committed to rethinking East Asia in regional and maritime (rather than misleading and anachronistic national) terms. . . . Kim's ambit [is] to ""overcome the more commonplace Japan-centric view of medieval Japanese religion."" In this, she has succeeded remarkably, and in record time, with an efficient and brisk writing style.--Charlotte Eubanks, Pennsylvania State University ""Journal of the American Oriental Society, 141:2 (2021)"" In her provocative study, Sujung Kim seeks to recover a medieval Japanese mythic imagination surrounding Korea by examining the curious figure of Shinra Myōjin, a deity whose name points squarely to the ancient Korean kingdom of Silla. Adopting as her framework the East Asian ""Mediterranean"" . . . she challenges our habitually landlocked view of Japan as an isolated entity and forces us to grapple with the ways that maritime interactions with and images of the continent shaped premodern Japanese Buddhism. . . . Kim should be commended for effectively utilizing a limited evidence base to craft an innovative study that opens new avenues of inquiry.--Andrew Macomber, Oberlin College ""Monumenta Nipponica, 75:2 (2020)"" Sujung Kim has written an outstanding study of a transregional deity that is conceptualized within a framework of maritime connectivity between Korea and Japan. Her analysis of textual and art historical sources is superb. She not only offers insight into the circulation and transformation of Buddhist ideas, but also proposes new ways of examining translocal diffusion of religious ideas. This book is a major contribution to the field of maritime interactions in the East China Sea and more broadly to the study of intra-Asian connections. It adds to the understanding of the transmission of Buddhism across Asia, interactions between Korea and Japan during the medieval period, as well as to the complexities of cross-cultural intercourse and influences.--Tansen Sen, New York University Shanghai This is a refreshing and insightful look at medieval Japan's social and religious milieu. The syncretistic amalgamation of various religious figures--buddhas, bodhisattvas, kami, devas, and others--is often seen as a particularly Japanese phenomenon. And yet without denying its distinctive Japanese flavor, the author shows that this brew is an international and multicultural mix, including deities from India, China, and Korea that are transformed in a new context. The image of an ""East Asian Mediterranean"" is especially useful in understanding medieval Japanese religion and culture from a broader geographical and social perspective.--Paul L. Swanson, Nanzan Institute for Religion and Culture In a work that is ground-breaking in many ways, Sujung Kim investigates the identity and role of the deity Shinra Myōjin in the Jimon tradition of Japanese Tendai. Primary source material on the subject is sparse: Kim acknowledges this problem and analyzes her subject in a multidisciplinary fashion, utilizing several theoretical perspectives coherently and convincingly. Although some scholars may question aspects of her analysis, challenges are to be expected in a book that is this innovative and thought-provoking.--Paul Groner, professor emeritus, University of Virginia


In her provocative study, Sujung Kim seeks to recover a medieval Japanese mythic imagination surrounding Korea by examining the curious figure of Shinra Myojin, a deity whose name points squarely to the ancient Korean kingdom of Silla. Adopting as her framework the East Asian Mediterranean . . . she challenges our habitually landlocked view of Japan as an isolated entity and forces us to grapple with the ways that maritime interactions with and images of the continent shaped premodern Japanese Buddhism. ... Kim should be commended for effectively utilizing a limited evidence base to craft an innovative study that opens new avenues of inquiry.--Andrew Macomber, Oberlin College Monumenta Nipponica, 75:2 (2020) Sujung Kim has written an outstanding study of a transregional deity that is conceptualized within a framework of maritime connectivity between Korea and Japan. Her analysis of textual and art historical sources is superb. She not only offers insight into the circulation and transformation of Buddhist ideas, but also proposes new ways of examining translocal diffusion of religious ideas. This book is a major contribution to the field of maritime interactions in the East China Sea and more broadly to the study of intra-Asian connections. It adds to the understanding of the transmission of Buddhism across Asia, interactions between Korea and Japan during the medieval period, as well as to the complexities of cross-cultural intercourse and influences.--Tansen Sen, New York University Shanghai This is a refreshing and insightful look at medieval Japan's social and religious milieu. The syncretistic amalgamation of various religious figures--buddhas, bodhisattvas, kami, devas, and others--is often seen as a particularly Japanese phenomenon. And yet without denying its distinctive Japanese flavor, the author shows that this brew is an international and multicultural mix, including deities from India, China, and Korea that are transformed in a new context. The image of an East Asian Mediterranean is especially useful in understanding medieval Japanese religion and culture from a broader geographical and social perspective.--Paul L. Swanson, Nanzan Institute for Religion and Culture In a work that is ground-breaking in many ways, Sujung Kim investigates the identity and role of the deity Shinra Myojin in the Jimon tradition of Japanese Tendai. Primary source material on the subject is sparse: Kim acknowledges this problem and analyzes her subject in a multidisciplinary fashion, utilizing several theoretical perspectives coherently and convincingly. Although some scholars may question aspects of her analysis, challenges are to be expected in a book that is this innovative and thought-provoking.--Paul Groner, professor emeritus, University of Virginia


Sujung Kim has written an outstanding study of a transregional deity that is conceptualized within a framework of maritime connectivity between Korea and Japan. Her analysis of textual and art historical sources is superb. She not only offers insight into the circulation and transformation of Buddhist ideas, but also proposes new ways of examining translocal diffusion of religious ideas. This book is a major contribution to the field of maritime interactions in the East China Sea and more broadly to the study of intra-Asian connections. It adds to the understanding of the transmission of Buddhism across Asia, interactions between Korea and Japan during the medieval period, as well as to the complexities of cross-cultural intercourse and influences.--Tansen Sen, New York University Shanghai This is a refreshing and insightful look at medieval Japan's social and religious milieu. The syncretistic amalgamation of various religious figures--buddhas, bodhisattvas, kami, devas, and others--is often seen as a particularly Japanese phenomenon. And yet without denying its distinctive Japanese flavor, the author shows that this brew is an international and multicultural mix, including deities from India, China, and Korea that are transformed in a new context. The image of an East Asian Mediterranean is especially useful in understanding medieval Japanese religion and culture from a broader geographical and social perspective.--Paul L. Swanson, Nanzan Institute for Religion and Culture In a work that is ground-breaking in many ways, Sujung Kim investigates the identity and role of the deity Shinra Myojin in the Jimon tradition of Japanese Tendai. Primary source material on the subject is sparse: Kim acknowledges this problem and analyzes her subject in a multidisciplinary fashion, utilizing several theoretical perspectives coherently and convincingly. Although some scholars may question aspects of her analysis, challenges are to be expected in a book that is this innovative and thought-provoking.--Paul Groner, professor emeritus, University of Virginia


"As this study shows, Shinra Myōjin is an extremely complex and enigmatic figure. By placing this deity in the context of the various, often overlapping, economic, political and cultural networks, Kim has succeeded in providing us with both a rich and nuanced view of the various roles played by Shinra Myōjin and new insights into the ways in which the religious imagination functioned in medieval Japan. It is without doubt an exciting new addition to the scholarly literature on Japanese religions.--Robert F. Rhodes, Otani University, Kyoto ""Journal of Religion in Japan, 10:1 (March 2021)"" Indeed, Kim shows us how consideration of a particular deity can revolutionize the history of a particular sect, as the Tendai Jimon have been vastly understudied when compared to the Tendai Sanmon. Her monograph also demonstrates how multidisciplinary approaches can provide useful tools for considering topics in which source material is sparse . . . [T]he text is invaluable to scholars of Japanese religions in adding complexity and richness to the medieval religious landscape, acknowledging and exploring the networks of the East Asian Mediterranean, and contributing to our growing knowledge of the role of deities in Japanese religious history.--Emily B. Simpson, Dartmouth College ""Journal of Asian Humanities at Kyushu University, Vol. 6 (2021)"" Kim's approach to presenting the development of the character of Shinra Myōjin in Japanese religious lore is equally innovative and fascinating. She challenges the customary notion concerning this widely worshipped divinity that he was a Korean deity who simply decided to move over to Japan in order to protect a Japanese Buddhist tradition. Instead, Kim takes pains to reveal ""the sociocultural and mythological networks within which this deity was embedded."" Furthermore, she maintains that this network ought to be conceived as being beyond the national and cultural boundaries of Korea and Japan.--Lehel Balogh, Hokkaido University ""Religious Studies Review, 46:4 (December 2020)"" Kim's maritime approach takes a bold stand in its refusal to read modern, national boundaries, and the geopolitical borders and institutional parameters of Asian Studies, onto the complexities of a rich sociocultural network that spanned seas, transcended languages, and spread across vast distances. . . . [Her] work takes a transcultural and interdisciplinary approach that should be of interest to any scholar, regardless of discipline, who is committed to rethinking East Asia in regional and maritime (rather than misleading and anachronistic national) terms. . . . Kim's ambit [is] to ""overcome the more commonplace Japan-centric view of medieval Japanese religion."" In this, she has succeeded remarkably, and in record time, with an efficient and brisk writing style.--Charlotte Eubanks, Pennsylvania State University ""Journal of the American Oriental Society, 141:2 (2021)"" In her provocative study, Sujung Kim seeks to recover a medieval Japanese mythic imagination surrounding Korea by examining the curious figure of Shinra Myōjin, a deity whose name points squarely to the ancient Korean kingdom of Silla. Adopting as her framework the East Asian ""Mediterranean"" . . . she challenges our habitually landlocked view of Japan as an isolated entity and forces us to grapple with the ways that maritime interactions with and images of the continent shaped premodern Japanese Buddhism. . . . Kim should be commended for effectively utilizing a limited evidence base to craft an innovative study that opens new avenues of inquiry.--Andrew Macomber, Oberlin College ""Monumenta Nipponica, 75:2 (2020)"" Sujung Kim has written an outstanding study of a transregional deity that is conceptualized within a framework of maritime connectivity between Korea and Japan. Her analysis of textual and art historical sources is superb. She not only offers insight into the circulation and transformation of Buddhist ideas, but also proposes new ways of examining translocal diffusion of religious ideas. This book is a major contribution to the field of maritime interactions in the East China Sea and more broadly to the study of intra-Asian connections. It adds to the understanding of the transmission of Buddhism across Asia, interactions between Korea and Japan during the medieval period, as well as to the complexities of cross-cultural intercourse and influences.--Tansen Sen, New York University Shanghai This is a refreshing and insightful look at medieval Japan's social and religious milieu. The syncretistic amalgamation of various religious figures--buddhas, bodhisattvas, kami, devas, and others--is often seen as a particularly Japanese phenomenon. And yet without denying its distinctive Japanese flavor, the author shows that this brew is an international and multicultural mix, including deities from India, China, and Korea that are transformed in a new context. The image of an ""East Asian Mediterranean"" is especially useful in understanding medieval Japanese religion and culture from a broader geographical and social perspective.--Paul L. Swanson, Nanzan Institute for Religion and Culture In a work that is ground-breaking in many ways, Sujung Kim investigates the identity and role of the deity Shinra Myōjin in the Jimon tradition of Japanese Tendai. Primary source material on the subject is sparse: Kim acknowledges this problem and analyzes her subject in a multidisciplinary fashion, utilizing several theoretical perspectives coherently and convincingly. Although some scholars may question aspects of her analysis, challenges are to be expected in a book that is this innovative and thought-provoking.--Paul Groner, professor emeritus, University of Virginia"


Author Information

Sujung Kim is assistant professor of religious studies at DePauw University.

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