Religion

Neither Monk nor Layman: Clerical Marriage in Modern Japanese Buddhism

ebook (PDF via app)

50% off with code BLOOM50

Sale Price:
$52.50/拢44.00
Price:
$105.00/拢88.00
ISBN:
Published:
Jun 8, 2021
2002
Illus:
7 b/w illus.
  • Audio and ebooks (EPUB and PDF) purchased from this site must be accessed on the 91桃色 app. After purchasing, you will an receive email with instructions to access your purchase.
    About audio and ebooks
  • Request Exam Copy

Buddhism comes in many forms, but in Japan it stands apart from all the rest in one most striking way—the monks get married. In Neither Monk nor Layman, the most comprehensive study of this topic in any language, Richard Jaffe addresses the emergence of an openly married clergy as a momentous change in the history of modern Japanese Buddhism. He demonstrates, in clear and engaging prose, that this shift was not an easy one for Japanese Buddhists. Yet the transformation that began in the early Meiji period (1868-1912)—when monks were ordered by government authorities to adopt common surnames and allowed to marry, to have children, and to eat meat—today extends to all the country’s Buddhist denominations.


Jaffe traces the gradual acceptance of clerical marriage by Japanese Buddhists from the premodern emergence of the 鈥渃lerical marriage problem鈥 in the Edo period to its widespread practice by the start of the Second World War. In doing so he considers related issues such as the dissolution of clerical status and the growing domestication of Japanese temple life. This book reveals the deep contradictions between sectarian teachings that continue to idealize renunciation and a clergy whose lives closely resemble those of their parishioners in modern Japanese society. It will attract not only scholars of religion and of Japanese history, but all those interested in the encounter-conflict between regimes of modernization and religious institutions and the fate of celibate religious practices in the twentieth century.