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7. The Structure of Japanese Buddhist Funerals
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Mariko Namba Walter
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Introduction 1
- 1. Mukaekō Practice for the Deathbed 27
- 2. With the Help of ‘‘Good Friends’’ Deathbed Ritual Practices in Early Medieval Japan 61
- 3. Beyond Death and the Afterlife Considering Relic Veneration in Medieval Japan 102
- 4. Collective Suicide at the Funeral of Jitsunyo Mimesis or Solidarity? 137
- 5. At the Crossroads of Birth and Death The Blood Pool Hell and Postmortem Fetal Extraction 175
- 6. Funerary Zen Sōtō Zen Death Management in Tokugawa Japan 207
- 7. The Structure of Japanese Buddhist Funerals 247
- 8. The Price of Naming the Dead Posthumous Precept Names and Critiques of Contemporary Japanese Buddhism 293
- 9. The Orthodox Heresy of Buddhist Funerals 325
- Glossary of Chinese and Japanese Characters 349
- Contributors 363
- Index 365
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Introduction 1
- 1. Mukaekō Practice for the Deathbed 27
- 2. With the Help of ‘‘Good Friends’’ Deathbed Ritual Practices in Early Medieval Japan 61
- 3. Beyond Death and the Afterlife Considering Relic Veneration in Medieval Japan 102
- 4. Collective Suicide at the Funeral of Jitsunyo Mimesis or Solidarity? 137
- 5. At the Crossroads of Birth and Death The Blood Pool Hell and Postmortem Fetal Extraction 175
- 6. Funerary Zen Sōtō Zen Death Management in Tokugawa Japan 207
- 7. The Structure of Japanese Buddhist Funerals 247
- 8. The Price of Naming the Dead Posthumous Precept Names and Critiques of Contemporary Japanese Buddhism 293
- 9. The Orthodox Heresy of Buddhist Funerals 325
- Glossary of Chinese and Japanese Characters 349
- Contributors 363
- Index 365