Memories and Strategic Silence in Jōdoji engi

Jōdoji engi, begun in 1372, records the history of a small temple established in 1192 on the grounds of Ōbe estate in Harima province. This article will compare the engi's account of the temples founder Chōgen and his successor Kan'amidabutsu, and of the construction of the temple itself,...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Japanese journal of religious studies
Authors: Goodwin, Janet R. 1939- (Author) ; Wilson, Kevin (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Nanzan Institute [2015]
In: Japanese journal of religious studies
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B Chōgen 1121-1206 / Jōdoji (Ono) / Pratitya-samutpada / Historicity / Religious conflict / History 1100-1300
RelBib Classification:AD Sociology of religion; religious policy
BL Buddhism
KBM Asia
KCA Monasticism; religious orders
TG High Middle Ages
Further subjects:B Estate management
B Proprietors
B Monks
B Religious Studies
B Violence
B Religious rituals
B Land reclamation
B Bodhisattva
B Temples
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Summary:Jōdoji engi, begun in 1372, records the history of a small temple established in 1192 on the grounds of Ōbe estate in Harima province. This article will compare the engi's account of the temples founder Chōgen and his successor Kan'amidabutsu, and of the construction of the temple itself, with documentary records. We note the engi's emphasis on the wondrous and miraculous rather than on the temple's role in land reclamation and estate supervision that the documents stress. We also examine the engi's silences, particularly in regard to violent confrontations between Jōdoji monks and Ōbe estate's proprietor, Tōdaiji, and the estate's local managers beginning in the 1290s. The documentary record has little else to say about Jōdoji after the 1220s; and the engt does not fill us in. We will ask what picture of the temple the engi's compilers were trying to project through what they chose to record and to omit.
Contains:Enthalten in: Japanese journal of religious studies