Abstract

Contributors Preface 1. Introduction: Combinatory religion and the honji suijaku paradigm in pre-modern Japan Mark Teeuwen and Fabio Rambelli 2. From thunder child to Dharma protector: Dojo hoshi and the Buddhist appropriation of Japanese local deities Irene Lin 3. The source of oracular speech: absense? presence? or plain treachery? The case of Hachiman Usa-gu gotakusenshu Allan Grapard 4. Wrathful Deities and saving deities Sato Hiroo 5. The creation of a honji suijaku deity: Amaterasu as the Judge of the Dead Mark Teeuwen 6. Honji suijaku and the logic of combinatory images: Two case studies Iyanaga Nobumi 7. Honji suijaku and the development of etymological allegoresis as an interpretive method in medieval commentaries Susan Blakeley/Klein 8. 'Both parts' or 'only one'? Challenges to the honji suijaku paradigm in the Edo period Bernhard Scheid 9. Hokke Shinto: Kami in the Nichiren tradition Lucia Dolce 10. Honji suijaku at work: Religion, economics, and ideology in pre-modern Japan Fabio Rambelli 11. The interaction between Buddhist and Shinto traditions at Suwa Shrine Inoue Takami 12. Dancing the doctrine: Honji suijaku thought in kagura performances Irit Averbuch Notes Bibliography Index

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