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Explaining Pictures: Buddhist Propaganda & Etoki Storytelling in Japan

KAMINISHI Ikumi [Other titles by this author]

ISBN: 9780824826970

Hawaii University Press 2006 1st Edition

AU $112.00
Currently Out of Stock Please Inquire for Due Date

 Explaining Pictures: Buddhist Propaganda & <I>Etok (View larger image)

Early Japanese Buddhism was patronised by the literate classes and remained a prerogative of the elite until the end of the 12th century. With the fiscal and political decline of its aristocratic patrons, the Buddhist establishment turned increasingly to lay commoners for financial support, using paintings to accommodate its new, and often subliterate, audiences. One type of preaching, known as etoki (pictorial decipherment), helped bridge the worlds of esoteric Buddhism and lay practice and reveals much about the role of art in the context of didactic storytelling and proselytisation. Beginning with the provocative claim that the popularisation of Buddhism in the medieval period was a phenomenon of visual culture, this volume re-examines the history (and historiography) of medieval Japanese Buddhism. With theoretical sophistication and a full appreciation of the power of imagery to convey and control religious meaning, it investigates a range of aspects of etoki, including the particularly active role of itinerant nuns, whose performances were especially edifying to female audiences, as well as the visual hagiography of the reputed founder of Japanese Buddhism, the pictorial projections of Buddhist paradise and hell, and the explanation, through visual imagery, of sacred mountains. Explaining Pictures is an important groundbreaking work, the first book-length study devoted to the phenomenon of Buddhist art as religious propaganda and pictorial storytelling as a form of popular culture in medieval Japan. A truly interdisciplinary study, it suggests fruitful avenues of discussion between art historians and historians of Japanese Buddhism. Scholars and students with an interest in Japanese Buddhism, art, and social and cultural history will find its examination of significant issues fresh and stimulating. It will also find an appreciative audience among those concerned with the relationship between art and religion, the mechanics of proselytisation, and Asian visual culture.

235 x 150mm; 64 illustrations (13 in colour).

284pp

(For this item please quote stock ID 25192)

Related Subject Areas:

Japan     

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