Religion, Power, and the Rise of Shinto in Early Modern Japan
In: Bloomsbury Shinto Studies
Cover page -- Halftitle page -- Series page -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Contents -- Illustrations -- Preface -- Editorial Conventions -- Introduction Tokugawa Religious Orthopraxy and the Phenomenon of Domain Shinto -- Religious Orthopraxy and its Challenges: The Chapters within This Volume -- Domain Shinto -- Conclusion -- Part One Tokugawa Orthopraxy -- 1 Anti-Christian Temple Certification (terauke) in Early Modern Japan Establishment, Practice, and Challenges -- The Establishment of Temple Certification -- The Practice of Temple Certification -- Challenges to Temple Certification -- Epilogue -- 2 Ieyasu's Posthumous Title and the Tokugawa Discourse on "Divine Country" -- The Discourse on the "Divine Country" and its Development -- The shinkoku Discourse of the "Holders of the Realm" -- The Significance of Ieyasu's Divine Title -- Shinkoku in Tōshōgū Ritualism -- Epilogue -- Part Two Unwanted Religious Groups -- 3 Anti-Christian Measures in Nagasaki During the Early Edo Period (1614-44) -- The Destruction of Christian Institutions -- The Appropriation of Christian Space -- Buddhist Temples in the Anti-Christian Policy -- The Establishment of Buddhist Temples -- The Establishment of Shinto Shrines -- Shrines in the Anti-Christian Policy -- Conclusion -- 4 When the Lotus Went Underground The Nichiren Buddhist Fujufuse Movement and Its Early Modern Persecution -- A Controversy Emerges -- The Great Buddha Memorial Rites and Nichiō's Dissent -- The Conflict Moves East -- Accommodationist Attacks and Fujufuse Resistance -- The Kanbun-Era Persecution -- Conclusion -- 5 "Deviant Practices" and "Strange Acts" Late Tokugawa Judicial Perspectives on Heteropraxy -- Rules and Precedents -- Propagation of Deviant Practices: Hiji Hōmon -- Charlatanry and Clerical Imprecations -- The Kirishitan Issue -- Conclusion -- Part Three Intellectual Challenges.