The Teeth and Claws of the Buddha - by Mikael S Adolphson (Paperback)
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Highlights
- Japan's monastic warriors have fared poorly in comparison to the samurai, both in terms of historical reputation and representations in popular culture.
- About the Author: Mikael S. Adolphson is Keidanren Professor of Japanese Studies at the University of Cambridge .
- 232 Pages
- History, Asia
Description
Book Synopsis
Japan's monastic warriors have fared poorly in comparison to the samurai, both in terms of historical reputation and representations in popular culture. Often maligned and criticized for their involvement in politics and other secular matters, they have been seen as figures separate from the larger military class. However, as Mikael Adolphson reveals in his comprehensive and authoritative examination of the social origins of the monastic forces, political conditions, and warfare practices of the Heian (794-1185) and Kamakura (1185-1333) eras, these "monk-warriors"(sôhei) were in reality inseparable from the warrior class. Their negative image, Adolphson argues, is a construct that grew out of artistic sources critical of the established temples from the fourteenth century on.
In deconstructing the sôhei image and looking for clues as to the characteristics, role, and meaning of the monastic forces, The Teeth and Claws of the Buddha highlights the importance of historical circumstances; it also points to the fallacies of allowing later, especially modern, notions of religion to exert undue influence on interpretations of the past. It further suggests that, rather than constituting a separate category of violence, religious violence needs to be understood in its political, social, military, and ideological contexts.Review Quotes
We should be grateful to the shortcomings of previous scholarship for the opportunity given Adolphson to write a book that should be required of all students of Japanese history, especially as a text on historical methodology. It is probably the most useful introduction to the problems of writing history since Josephine Tey's The Daughter of Time.-- "American Historical Review"
What Adolphson has done to the word sohei is not unlike what his intellectual master Kuroda Toshio did for the word Shinto. He has exposed the limits of the term's historical relevance, revealed its eighteenth-century origins, underscored its ideological inflections, and shown how it can obscure rather than reveal the varied and complex historical subject it seeks to name. In doing do, Adolphson has not only changed the way that historians of Japan will look at something we long thought we knew, but will also allow future historians to pose questions we never even thought to ask.-- "Monumenta Nipponica"
A truly fascinating book that deserves the close attention of any reader interested in Buddhism and war.-- "Religious Studies Review"
Adolphson does an outstanding job of re-incorporating armed monastic struggles into a wider socio-political and cultural context of medieval Japan.-- "Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society"
An innovative and insightful study of monk-warriors that is likely to become the definitive treatment of this topic.-- "Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies"
Well written, with extensive illustrations. . . . Highly recommended.-- "Choice"
About the Author
Mikael S. Adolphson is Keidanren Professor of Japanese Studies at the University of Cambridge .