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IN 1984, HELEN HARDACRE published her second monograph, The Religion of Japan's Korean Minority: The Preservation of Ethnic Identity. The book was a slim volume on a topic studied by few Japanese scholars until then. It would be nearly another twenty years before Iida Takafumi would publish a more comprehensive and updated monograph on the subject in the wake of the emergence of a strong zainichi (resident) Korean identity in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Hardacre's fieldwork-based study examined characteristics of zainichi Korean temples in the Ikoma Mountain Range near Osaka and the function of the bosaru, female shamans, in the zainichi Korean community. Hardacre showed that unlike their counterparts in Korea, many Japan-based bosaru established affiliations with Japanese Buddhist schools and played an important role in the identity formation of zainichi Korean women. The volume is probably Hardacre's least-known work because of its limited circulation, but together with Hardacre's first, more widely-known monograph on Reiyukai, it marked the beginning in a prolific career as a leading scholar of contemporary Japanese religion.
Hardacre's scholarship has shown remarkable scope. Her work on modern and contemporary Japanese religions is best known in the fields of new religious movements (nrm) and the relationship between religion and the state, but she has also been a pioneer in other areas such as gender and ethnicity. Hardacre's engagement with Japanese religions began as an undergraduate and as an ma student under Winston L. King in the Department of Religious Studies at Vanderbilt University. She continued her graduate studies at the University of Chicago under Joseph Kitagawa, one of the founders of the field of Japanese Religions in the United States. Unlike Kitagawa, whose work was strongly indebted to the history of religion, Hardacre chose a more ethnographic and sociological approach. This has remained one of her trademarks.
Her work on nrm in Japan began with her dissertation, completed in 1980, and later published as a monograph entitled Lay Buddhism in Contemporary Japan: Reiyukai Kyodan (1984). In her study of Reiyukai, a Buddhist nrm that links beliefs in spirits with faith in the Lotus Sutra and promotes conservative familialism, she argued forcefully against the received argument that nrm owe their existence to crisis. In her words, "while a crisis may explain ... why groups form at a particular time, it does not account for their persistence once the time of crisis has passed" (1984a, 10). For the purposes of her study, Hardacre temporarily joined the Los Angeles branch of Reiyukai. Even though such participant observation has become standard in anthropology, at the time it rankled some of the later reviewers of her work-perhaps a reflection of the underlying suspicion with which nrm are often treated in contrast to more established religious groups. Hardacre combined ethnography with her signature sensitivity to gender issues: she argued that women members were not simply empowered by the movement but actually found themselves having to subscribe to a chauvinist and sexist value system. Her monograph stands out as one of the first in-depth studies to take a Japanese new religious movement seriously and examine the implications of the movement's practices on its members.
Her next book, Kurozumikyo and the New Religions of Japan (1986) was devoted to one of Japan's earliest, Shinto-inspired nrm, founded in 1814 by Kurozumi Munetada (1780-1850). Hardacre's book took a more historical approach than her earlier study of Reiyukai by exploring the religious culture of Japan in the nineteenth century, a period of Japanese history that Hardacre would revisit in several subsequent works. Her first chapter, entitled "The World View of the New Religions," became the most widely read section of the book, useful beyond the case study of Kurozumikyo. At a time when few comprehensive studies of Japanese nrm were available, making it difficult for a student of Japanese religions to make sense of the overwhelming variety of organizations, Hardacre argued that these religions shared a unified worldview despite their obvious doctrinal differences. By worldview, she was not referring to a static cosmology but to "how a group of people understands itself to be related to the physical body, the social order, and the universe," all of which affects how "members think, feel, and act" (1986a, 8). nrm favor "balance, harmony, and congruence" of the "individual, society, nature, and the universe," which they perceive as "an integrated system" (11-12). Self-cultivation to perfect this integration, she argued, is central to this type of religious practice. The particular terminologies, culled from Buddhist, Shinto, and Confucian vocabularies, may be different across the nrm, but the underlying principles follow the same pattern (12-13). More recent studies on newer nrm may have challenged her argument, but it still represents a lasting contribution to the field. Several shorter publications on new and alternative religions have followed over the years on topics such as the tensions between the nrm and Shugend., Asano Wasabur. and spiritualism, .motoky. and gender, Shinmeiaishinkai and shamanism, Aum Shinriky. in the media, and the impact of the Aum Shinriky. incident on Japanese civil society.
Another major arena of research for Hardacre has been the relationship between religion and the state. As in her work on nrm, she has demonstrated a willingness to engage with controversial topics. Shinto and the State, 1868.1988 (1989), a balanced and historically nuanced study of the development of State Shinto, is a case in point. While prior Western studies of State Shinto focused on vilifying its ideological role during World War II, Hardacre's survey of Shinto's complex relationship with state power from the early modern period through the politically conservative 1980s took into consideration the role Shinto played not just on the national stage, but on a popular level. Her discussion of the problematic relationship between Shinto institutions and the postwar state foreshadowed her current research on constitutional reform in contemporary Japan. Her present study elucidates, for example, the roles of religion in the government's efforts to revise the constitution in regards to the Self Defense Force (Article 9) and gender equality (Article 24). Her involvement in another conference volume, Visions of Asian Authority, edited with Charles Keyes and Lauren Kendall (1994), speaks to her attentiveness to the relationship between religion and modern Asian nation-states more broadly.
Her interest in nineteenth-century Japan, already evident in her work on nrm and Shinto, led to her work on nineteenth-century regional religion in Sagami and Musashi Provinces, published as Religion and Society in Nineteenth- Century Japan: A Study of the Southern Kant. Region, Using Late Edo and Early Meiji Gazetteers (2002). Based on a close reading of regional gazetteers from the nineteenth century, Hardacre examined what late Edo religion looked like on the ground. Her study urges us to pay attention to regional idiosyncrasies and to consider sources that can provide us with remarkable insight into local culture. Her concern with the nineteenth century also led her to publish New Directions in the Study of Meiji Japan, edited with Adam Kern (1998). The volume was based on an international conference she organized on the subject at Harvard University. The Meiji conference and the subsequent conference volume also demonstrated her commitment to chronicling the state of given fields of research, a commitment that also yielded another edited volume, The Postwar Development of Japanese Studies in the United States (1999).
A feminist reading of gender issues has been a recurrent thread in Hardacre's scholarship, from the role of women in the nrm and among the Korean minority in Japan to her work on mizuko kuy. ... . Marketing the Menacing Fetus in Japan (1998), which was awarded the Arisawa Hiromichi Prize, has probably been her most controversial work. It sparked a vigorous debate about how to interpret mizuko kuy.. Was the rite a compassionate acknowledgement of women's suffering or did it, as Hardacre suggested, prey on women's fears? To prove her point that the rite's popularity was due to skillful, fetocentric marketing of the aborted fetus's menacing powers, Hardacre explored the discourse surrounding mizuko kuy. beyond the boundaries of Buddhist temples and beyond metropolitan areas, which had served as sites of study in other scholars' works. Her study included rural Buddhist temples, Shinto shrines, and popular print media to present a comprehensive view of mizuko kuy. in the context of Japan's reproductive and sexual culture.
As this brief survey of Hardacre's work illustrates, her contributions to modern and contemporary Japanese religions are extensive. Her research refuses to subscribe to sectarian boundaries and continuously probes the contested margins of Japanese religions: nrm, ethnic minorities, gender, controversial rites, State Shinto, and constitutional reform. This special issue demonstrates the scope of Helen Hardacre's influence on the field by bringing together a wide range of studies by scholars that have worked closely with her as colleagues from Japan and her graduate students during her years at Princeton University (1980.1989), Griffith University (1990.1992), and Harvard University (1992.present).
The essays included in this volume mirror a number of her research interests. The relationship between religion and the state, for example, is the major theme of the two contributions by Hardacre's colleagues in Japan who have influenced her work: Tamamuro Fumio and Shimazono Susumu. The other essays have been contributed by former students of Hardacre's who wrote their doctoral dissertations under her supervision on various aspects of religiosity in early modern and modern Japan: Nam-lin Hur, Duncan Williams, Regan Murphy, Hwansoo Kim, and Barbara Ambros.
Tamamuro Fumio, one of Japan's leading authorities on Edo and Meiji religious history, contributes an essay on the development of the Buddhist parish system (danka seido ...) within the context of anti-Christianity, funerary Buddhism, and the legal structures of the Tokugawa regime. Over the years, Tamamuro's wide-ranging research on how religious institutions (on both local and translocal levels) interacted with state institutions (also both locally and translocally) probably directly inspired Hardacre's monograph, Religion and Society in Nineteenth-Century Japan. Indeed, Hardacre's return to studying the nineteenth century.after a number of works on the modern and contemporary periods.was likely a result of her relationship with Tamamuro. This research shift opened up an area of inquiry that has subsequently been taken up by a new generation of scholars, including several contributors to this volume. The essay included here was written by Tamamuro specifically for this special issue, and was translated into English by Duncan Williams.
Duncan Williams's contribution, which supplements his recent monograph on early modern Zen Buddhism, also investigates an aspect of Edo-period Buddhism, in this case the social and institutional history of S.t. Zen Buddhism as revealed by the so-called 1627 "purple-robe incident." In it he describes how the shifting landscapes of secular and religious power due to the new regulating initiatives of the bakufu affected the customary authority of the imperial house to award purple robes to distinguished monks. In so doing, Williams reveals a complex religious world where the creation and enforcement of new legal regimes come up against customary traditions, local practices, and the economics of religious authority. This examination of how religious life is shaped by both regional practice and centrally mandated laws reflects Hardacre's insistence on the study of religion as it is practiced at the local level.
Nam-lin Hur, the author of two monographs on Edo-period Buddhism, extends his work on Asakusa Sens.ji to the well-known temple Zenk.ji through an examination of how its popular religious culture developed from the occasional display of its normally hidden Amida Buddha. Hur explores the interconnections between the practice of kaich. ... (revealing the statue) with the economics of fundraising from pilgrims, who believed in the particularly powerful efficacy of coming into contact with the Zenk.ji Amida Triad on auspicious days associated with the kaich.. He argues that since kaich. did not have a doctrinal basis in canonical Buddhist texts, Zenk.ji's practice of revealing "secrecy".both in terms of the nature of deities and how a worshipper might come into contact with the deity.was derived from pre-Buddhist religious customs and framed in terms of a new bakufu program of public fundraising for Buddhist temples. Following Hardacre's lead, Hur's article emphasizes both the importance of specific sites of religious practice and the role of ordinary lay practitioners and monks in the creation of popular religious culture.
Regan Murphy, a current doctoral candidate under Hardacre's and Ryuichi Abe's supervision, studies the role of the esoteric Edo-period Buddhist monk Keich. in the development of the nativist movement of the period, Kokugaku ... . This movement, which has often been characterized as anti-Buddhist, began as a study of the Japanese language and subsequently became associated with the search for the Japanese essence. Murphy draws attention to the fact that the "father" of this movement, Keich., was in fact a Buddhist monk interested in Sanskrit as well as ancient Japanese texts. Murphy's exploration of the blurred boundaries between Buddhism and nativism provides a model for the study of Japanese religions beyond strict sectarian or institutional frameworks, an approach long advocated by Hardacre.
Focusing on religion and the state in the latter Meiji period, Shimazono Susumu offers his analysis of the genealogy of State Shinto as well as a history of the scholarship on this critical topic. Although Shimazono is, like Hardacre, best known for his work on the emergence and maintenance of new religious movements and spirituality in pre- and postwar Japan, his contribution to this volume explores the genealogies of the category of "religion" vis-a-vis the question of how to understand the "Shinto" tradition, a central issue in the study of Japanese religions. He points out how State Shinto was not simply imposed from above, but actively engaged with by ordinary people in the process of modern nation building in which the non-elite also carved out their space. In this approach that goes beyond treating State Shinto as intellectual history, his work resonates with Hardacre's own seminal work, Shinto and the State, which he also explores in his article here.
Hwansoo Kim recently finished his doctoral degree under Hardacre on a groundbreaking piece of scholarship that explores Japanese and Korean Buddhism during the colonial period. In his essay, Kim takes up the unusual case of a Japanese priest, S.ma Sh.ei, who studied Korean S.n from 1929 to 1936. Unlike the majority of Japanese Buddhists based in Korea, who viewed Korean Buddhism as backward and in dire need of "reform" and modernization, S.ma sincerely respected and sought out the great S.n masters. Kim argues that S.ma represents an individual for whom religious identity as a Zen monk overrode his identity as a Japanese national. This examination of a transnational identity provides a counterpoint to the prevailing discourse on Korean Buddhism of Japanese colonialism and resistance to it. It is, in this way, a turn to the margins that sheds light anew on the mainstream of Japanese religions, much like Hardacre's very first publication on zainichi Korean temples in Japan.
The final essay is by Barbara Ambros, whose recent monograph focused on the early modern history of the .yama, a sacred mountain and pilgrimage site. Here she contributes an essay on the making of a documentary film on a contemporary pilgrimage confraternity associated with the mountain that raises critical ethnographic questions. While filming the Ohana pilgrimage confraternity, Ambros documents how her presence in the making of the documentary and her participation in the pilgrimage impacted everything from how history and doctrine were discussed by the group to the addition of rituals that they thought an outsider (an academic and a non-Japanese) might expect. The essay also draws attention to the myriad ways in which a traditional pilgrimage confraternity has both adapted to contemporary social and economic realities while performing nostalgic reenactments of tradition. The ethnographic orientation of this article resonates with Hardacre's early work on the contemporary, which likewise encountered questions of the appropriate place of a researcher during religious fieldwork, the impact the researcher might have on how a religious group represents itself, and how traditional gender roles can be challenged and subverted by contemporary religion as well as by a non-Japanese female researcher.
It is our hope that this volume will serve as a modest tribute to a remarkable scholar and teacher and draw attention to the breadth of Helen Hardacre's work on the early modern, modern, and contemporary religious life of the Japanese.
MAJOR PUBLICATIONS BY HELEN HARDACRE
1979 Sex-role norms and values in Reiyukai. Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 6: 445-60.
1982 The transformation of healing in the Japanese New Religions. History of Religions 20/3: 305-20.
1983 The cave and the womb world. Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 10: 149-76.
1984a Lay Buddhism in Contemporary Japan: Reiyukai Kyodan. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
1984b The Religion of Japan's Korean Minority: The Preservation of Ethnic Identity. Berkeley: Institute for East Asian Studies, University of California, Berkeley.
1986 Kurozumikyo and the New Religions of Japan. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
1986 Creating Shinto: The Great Promulgation campaign and the New Religions. Journal of Japanese Studies 12/1: 29-63.
1987 Hoza: The Dharma Seat. In Japanese Buddhism: Its Tradition, New Religions and Interaction with Christianity, ed. Minoru Kiyota, 96-105. Tokyo: Buddhist Books International.
1988a Maitreya, The Future Buddha. Edited by Helen Hardacre and Alan Sponberg, New York: Cambridge University Press.
1988b Whaling, beliefs and Japanese worldview. In Small-Type Coastal Whaling in Japan, ed. Milton Freeman, 52-65. Edmonton, AB: The Boreal Institute for Northern Studies.
1988c Maitreya in modern Japan. In Maitreya the Future Buddha, ed. Helen Hardacre and Alan Sponberg, 270-84. New York: Cambridge University Press.
1988d The Shinto priesthood in early Meiji Japan. History of Religions 27: 294- 320.
1989a Shinto and the State, 1868-1988. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
1989b Kurozumi Munetada, the founder of Kurozumi-kyo. In Kurozumi Shinto: An American Dialogue, ed. Willis Stoesz, 28-48. Chambersburg, PA: Anima Books.
1989c The Lotus Sutra in modern Japanese religions. In The Lotus Sutra in Japanese Culture, ed. George and Willa Tanabe, 209-24. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press.
1990 Gender and the millenium in Omotokyo, a Japanese New Religion. Japanese Civilization in the Modern World VI, Religion. Osaka: National Museum of Ethnology, Senri Ethnological Studies 29: 47-62.
1991 Japan: The public sphere in a non-Western setting. In Between States and Markets, The Voluntary Sector in Comparative Perspective, ed. Robert Wuthnow, 217.42. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
1992a Gender and the millennium in .moto: The limits of religious innovation. In Innovation in Religious Traditions, ed. Michael Williams and Collette Cox, 215.39. The Hague: Mouton.
1992b Language competence and postgraduate studies: The case of Japanese studies. Asian Studies Review 15/3: 48.53.
1992c The New Religions of Japan. In Columbia Project on Asia in the Social Sciences: A Guide for Teaching, ed. Myron Cohen, 526.36. New York: Columbia University Press.
1992d Religion in contemporary culture. Japanese Studies, Bulletin of the Japanese Studies Association of Australia. 12/2: 15.22.
1992e The New Religions, family, and society in Japan. In Fundamentalisms and Society: Reclaiming the Sciences, the Family, and Education, ed. Scott Appleby and Martin Marty, 129.50. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
1993 Japanese New Religions: Profiles in gender. In Fundamentalism and Gender, ed. John Hawley, 111.33. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
1994a Visions of Asian Authority: Religion and the Modern States of East and Southeast Asia, ed. Helen Hardacre, Charles Keyes, and Laurel Kendall. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press.
1994b Conflict between Shugend. and the New Religions of Bakumatsu Japan. Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 21: 137.66.
1994c Japanese studies in the United States: Present situation and future prospects. Asia Journal (Seoul) 1/1: 17.36.
1994d Response of Buddhism and Shinto to the issue of brain death and organ transplant. Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 3: 585.601.
1995a Aum Shinrikyo and the Japanese Media: The Pied Piper Meets the Lamb of God. New York: Columbia University East Asian Institute Report.
1995b Class, status and gender. In East and Southeast Asia: A Multidisciplinary Survey 1995 Eastern Asia: An Introductory History 2000, ed. Colin Mackerras, 495.506. Melbourne: Longman Cheshire.
1996 Shinmeiaishinkai and the study of shamanism in contemporary Japanese religious life. In Religion in Japan: Arrows to Heaven and Earth, ed. Ian James McMullen and Peter Kornicki, 198.219. Cambridge: Cambridge Oriental Publications No. 50, University of Cambridge.
1997a The role of the Japanese state in ritual and ritualization, 1868.1945. Bulletin de l'Ecole Francaise D'Extreme-Orient 84: 129.46.
1997b Tokyo Broadcasting and Aum Shinrikyo. Nieman Reports 51/1 (Spring): 66.69.
1998a Marketing the Menacing Fetus in Japan. Berkeley: University of California Press.
1998b New Directions in the Study of Meiji Japan, ed. Helen Hardacre and Adam Kern. Leiden: E.J. Brill.
1998c Asano Wasaburo and Japanese spiritualism in early twentieth-century Japan. In Japan's Competing Modernities, Issues in Culture and Democracy, 1900-1930, ed. Sharon A. Minichiello, 133-53. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press.
1999a The Postwar Development of Japanese Studies in the United States, ed. Helen Hardacre. Leiden: E.J. Brill.
1999b The postwar development of studies of Japanese religions. In The Postwar Development of Japanese Studies in the United States, ed. Helen Hardacre, 195-226. Leiden: E.J. Brill.
1999c The shaman and her transformations: The construction of gender in motifs of religious action. In Gender and Japanese History, ed. Wakita Haruko, Anne Bouchy, and Ueno Chizuko, 87-108. Osaka: Osaka University Press.
2000a Japanese religion and culture: Mizuko kuyo and women's health. Echoes of Peace 58: 11-14.
2000b How bizarre: Reconciling Japan's millenial movements with society [Aum Shinrikyo]. Harvard Asia Pacific Review 4/1 (Winter): 37-39.
2001 Sources for the study of religion and society in the late Edo period. Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 28: 227-60.
2002 Religion and Society in Nineteenth-Century Japan: A Study of the Southern Kanto Region, Using Late Edo and Early Meiji Gazetteers. Ann Arbor: Center for Japanese Studies, University of Michigan.
2003a After Aum: Religion and civil society in Japan. In The State of Civil Society in Japan, ed. Frank Schwartz and Susan Pharr, 135-53. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
2003b Fieldwork with Japanese religious groups. In Doing Fieldwork in Japan, ed. Theodore Bestor, Patricia Steinhoff, and Victoria Bestor, 71-88. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press.
2005 Constitutional revision and Japanese religions. Japanese Studies 25/3: 235-47.
2006a Le donne nella storia religiosa del Giappone. Grandi Religioni e Culture nell'Estremo Oriente: Giappone, ed. Julien Ries and Lawrence Sullivan, Vol. 9, 71-84. Milan: Jaca Book-Massimo.
2006b State and religion in Japan. In Nanzan Guide to Japanese Religions, ed. Paul L. Swanson and Clark Chilson, 274-88. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press.
2007/2008 Aum Shinrikyo and the Japanese media. History of Religions 47/2-3: 171-204.
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Copyright Nanzan Institute for Religion and Culture Winter 2009
Abstract
Ambros et al features Helen Hardacre and her contribution to the study of Japanese religion. Her book, Kurozumikyo and the New Religions of Japan (1986) was devoted to one of Japan's earliest, Shinto inspired new religious movement, founded in 1814 by Kurozumi Munetada (1780-1850). Hardacre's book took a more historical approach than her earlier study of Reiyukai by exploring the religious culture of Japan in the 19th century, a period of Japanese history that Hardacre would revisit in several subsequent works.
You have requested "on-the-fly" machine translation of selected content from our databases. This functionality is provided solely for your convenience and is in no way intended to replace human translation. Show full disclaimer
Neither ProQuest nor its licensors make any representations or warranties with respect to the translations. The translations are automatically generated "AS IS" and "AS AVAILABLE" and are not retained in our systems. PROQUEST AND ITS LICENSORS SPECIFICALLY DISCLAIM ANY AND ALL EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY WARRANTIES FOR AVAILABILITY, ACCURACY, TIMELINESS, COMPLETENESS, NON-INFRINGMENT, MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Your use of the translations is subject to all use restrictions contained in your Electronic Products License Agreement and by using the translation functionality you agree to forgo any and all claims against ProQuest or its licensors for your use of the translation functionality and any output derived there from. Hide full disclaimer