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Making Pilgrimages - Meaning and Practice in Shikoku (Paperback, New edition)
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Making Pilgrimages - Meaning and Practice in Shikoku (Paperback, New edition)
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This study involves a fourteen-hundred-kilometre-long pilgrimage
around Japan's fourth largest island, Shikoku. In travelling the
circuit of the eighty-eight Buddhist temples that make up the
route, pilgrims make their journey together with Kobo Daishi
(774-835), the holy miracle-working figure who is at the heart of
the pilgrimage. Once seen as a marginal practice, recent media
portrayal of the pilgrimage as a symbol of Japanese cultural
heritage has greatly increased the number of participants, both
Japanese and foreign. In this absorbing look at the nature of the
pilgrimage, Ian Reader examines contemporary practices and beliefs
in the context of historical development, taking into account
theoretical considerations of pilgrimage as a mode of activity and
revealing how pilgrimages such as Shikoku may change in nature over
the centuries. This rich ethnographic work covers a wide range of
pilgrimage activity and behaviour, drawing on accounts of pilgrims
travelling by traditional means on foot as well as those taking
advantage of the new package bus tours, and exploring the
pilgrimage's role in the everyday lives of participants and the
people of Shikoku alike. It discusses the various ways in which the
pilgrimage is made and the forces that have shaped it in the past
and in the present, including history and legend, the island's
landscape and residents, the narratives and actions of the pilgrims
and the priests who run the temples, regional authorities, and
commercial tour operators and bus companies. In studying the
Shikoku pilgrimage from anthropological, historical, and
sociological perspectives, Reader shows in vivid detail the
ambivalence and complexity of pilgrimage as a phenomenon that is
simultaneously local, national, and international and both marginal
and integral to the lives of its participants. Critically astute
yet highly accessible, Making Pilgrimages will be welcomed by those
with an interest in anthropology, religious studies, and Japanese
studies, and will be essential for anyone contemplating making the
pilgrimage themselves.
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