Bardwell L. Smith offers a fresh perspective on mizuko kuyo, the Japanese ceremony performed to bring solace to those who have experienced miscarriage, stillbirth, or abortion.
Bardwell L. Smith offers a fresh perspective on mizuko kuyo, the Japanese ceremony performed to bring solace to those who have experienced miscarriage, stillbirth, or abortion.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
John W. Nason Professor of Asian Studies (Emeritus), Carleton College
Inhaltsangabe
* PREFACE * PART ONE: Approaching the Worlds of Mizuko * 1. Mizuko Kuyo: Memorial Services for Child Loss in Japan * 2. Architectural, Iconographic, Doctrinal Features of Mizuko Kuyo * 3. Situating the Rites of Mourning: Two Temples and a Variety of Visitors * 4. The Phenomena of Mizuko Kuyo: Responses to Pregnancy Loss * PART TWO: Deciphering the Worlds of Pregnancy Loss: Women, Men, and the Unborn * 5. Japanese Woman as Housewife, Mother, and Worker: Patterns of Change and Continuity (1868-2010) * 6. Ancestors, Angry Spirits, and the Unborn: Caring for the Dead on the Path to Ancestorhood * 7. Mothers, Society, and Pregnancy Loss: Rethinking the Meaning of Nurture * PART THREE: Relating Mizuko Rei to the Larger Worlds of Profound Loss * 8. The Revival of Death, the Rebirth of Grieving, and Ways of Mourning * 9. Rituals of Affliction; An Invitation to Sobriety * APPENDICES: * 1. Adashino Nenbutsuji, English language text of Mizuko kuyo service * 2. Yvonne Rand, Jizo: Protector of Travelers into and out of Life * 3. Sai-no-kawara text, tr. of Manabe Kosai. Jizo-bosatsu no kenkyu [Research on Jizo Bodhisattva]. Kyoto: Sanmitsudo shoten, 1960. * 4. Yasuo Sakakibara, Economic Development and Temple Economics in Japan * NOTES * GLOSSARY * BIBLIOGRAPHY * NOTE ON TRANSLITERATION * ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS * INDEX
* PREFACE * PART ONE: Approaching the Worlds of Mizuko * 1. Mizuko Kuyo: Memorial Services for Child Loss in Japan * 2. Architectural, Iconographic, Doctrinal Features of Mizuko Kuyo * 3. Situating the Rites of Mourning: Two Temples and a Variety of Visitors * 4. The Phenomena of Mizuko Kuyo: Responses to Pregnancy Loss * PART TWO: Deciphering the Worlds of Pregnancy Loss: Women, Men, and the Unborn * 5. Japanese Woman as Housewife, Mother, and Worker: Patterns of Change and Continuity (1868-2010) * 6. Ancestors, Angry Spirits, and the Unborn: Caring for the Dead on the Path to Ancestorhood * 7. Mothers, Society, and Pregnancy Loss: Rethinking the Meaning of Nurture * PART THREE: Relating Mizuko Rei to the Larger Worlds of Profound Loss * 8. The Revival of Death, the Rebirth of Grieving, and Ways of Mourning * 9. Rituals of Affliction; An Invitation to Sobriety * APPENDICES: * 1. Adashino Nenbutsuji, English language text of Mizuko kuyo service * 2. Yvonne Rand, Jizo: Protector of Travelers into and out of Life * 3. Sai-no-kawara text, tr. of Manabe Kosai. Jizo-bosatsu no kenkyu [Research on Jizo Bodhisattva]. Kyoto: Sanmitsudo shoten, 1960. * 4. Yasuo Sakakibara, Economic Development and Temple Economics in Japan * NOTES * GLOSSARY * BIBLIOGRAPHY * NOTE ON TRANSLITERATION * ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS * INDEX
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