HARVARD EAST ASIAN MONOGRAPHS
Cover: Localizing Paradise in HARDCOVER

Harvard East Asian Monographs 235

Localizing Paradise

Kumano Pilgrimage and the Religious Landscape of Premodern Japan

Currently unavailable

Book Details

HARDCOVER

$42.50 • £31.95 • €38.30

ISBN 9780674013957

Publication: May 2006

Short

297 pages

6 x 9 inches

10 color illustrations, 28 black and white halftones, 1 map, 2 line art

Harvard University Asia Center > Harvard East Asian Monographs

World, subsidiary rights restricted

Although located far from the populated centers of traditional Japan, the three Kumano shrines occupied a central position in the Japanese religious landscape. For centuries Kumano was the most visited pilgrimage site in Japan and attracted devotees from across the boundaries of sect (Buddhist, Daoist, Shinto), class, and gender. It was also a major institutional center, commanding networks of affiliated shrines, extensive landholdings, and its own army, and a site of production, generating agricultural products and symbolic capital in the form of spiritual values. Kumano was thus both a real place and a utopia: a non-place of paradise or enlightenment. It was a location in which cultural ideals--about death, salvation, gender, and authority--were represented, contested, and even at times inverted.

This book encompasses both the real and the ideal, both the historical and the ideological, Kumano. It studies Kumano not only as a site of practice, a stage for the performance of asceticism and pilgrimage, but also as a place of the imagination, a topic of literary and artistic representation. Kumano was not unique in combining Buddhism with native traditions, for redefining death and its conquest, for expressing the relationship between religious and political authority, and for articulating the religious position of women. By studying Kumano’s particular religious landscape, we can better understand the larger, common religious landscape of premodern Japan.