Table of Contents
JOURNAL> Japanese Journal of Religious Studies, 43/2 (Fall 2016)
by Charles Muller
Japanese Journal of Religious
StudiesVolume 43:2 (2016) [http://nirc.nanzan-u.ac.jp/en/publications/jjrs/listofjournals/]
Shinran as “Other”: Revisiting Kurata Hyakuzō’s The
Priest and His Disciples [253–274]
The Way to Gyō: Priestly Asceticism on
the Shikoku Henro [275–305]
Jizō, Healing Rituals, and Women in Japan
[307–331]
Furusato and Emotional Pilgrimage: Ge
Ge Ge no Kitarō and Sakaiminato [333–356]
Many Tongues, Many Buddhisms in a Pluralistic
World: A Christian Interpretation at the Interreligious Crossroads [357–376]
Review of: Jiang Wu, Leaving for the Rising
Sun: Chinese Zen Master Yinyuan & the Authenticity Crisis in Early Modern
East Asia [377–383]
Review of: Barbara Ambros, Women in Japanese
Religions [384–386]
Review of: Gustav Heldt, The Kojiki: An
Account of Ancient Matters [387–389]
Review of: John W. M. Krummel, Nishida
Kitarō’s Chiasmatic Chorology: Place of Dialectic and Dialectic of Place
[390–395]
Review of: Eriko Ogihara-Schuck,Miyazaki’s
Animism Abroad: The Reception of Japanese Religious Themes by American and
German Audiences [396–400]
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