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NCC Center for the Study of Japanese Religions
JR 43 (1&2): The Materiality of Japanese Religion
2018
Articles
Introduction: The Materiality of Japanese Religion
Jørn Borup and Fabio Rambelli, 1-16.
The Concept of Zushi: On Enshrinement and Mobility of Buddhist Art in Japan
Chun Wa Chan, 17-38.
The Hokkeji Nuns, Relic Worship, and Theft in Medieval Japan
Julia Heather Cross, 39-68.
The Functions of Cloth in Datsueba Worship
Saka Chihiro, 69-96.
Dead Matter and Living Memory: Three Ways of Looking at the Higashi Honganji Hair Ropes
Melissa Anne-Marie Curley, 97-120.
Materializing Buddhist Memories: Objects and Images of the Silk Road in Hirayama Ikuo and Yakushiji temple
Paride Stortini, 122-144.
Daruma Meets Domovoi and Then Some Yoga: Russians in Japan and the Religious-Spiritual Materiality of Migrant Living
Ksenia Golovina, 145-168.
Creating a ritual: objects, goods, and services in Japanese childhood celebrations
Melinda Papp, 169-196.
Caring for sacred waste: The disposal of butsudan (Buddhist alters) in contemporary Japan
Hanna Gould, 197-220.
Book Reviews
Iwata Mami and Kirihara Kenshin, eds.
kami to hokote no bakumatsu Ishin: Kosaka suru shukyo seka.
Kami and Hotke's Bakumatsu Restoration: The Intersecting Religious World
Micah Auerback, 221-28.
Editorial
Editorial
Yoshinaga Shin'ichi, 229-230.
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