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Book Cover
E-book
Author Salguero, C. Pierce.

Title Buddhist Healing in Medieval China and Japan
Published Honolulu : University of Hawaii Press, 2020

Copies

Description 1 online resource (273 p.)
Contents "A Flock of Ghosts Bursting Forth and Scattering": Healing Narratives in a Sixth-Century Chinese Buddhist Hagiography / C. Pierce Salguero -- Teaching from the Sickbed: Ideas of Illness and Healing in the Vimalakīrti Sūtra and Their Reception in Medieval Chinese Literature / Antje Richter -- Lighting Lamps to Prolong Life: Ritual Healing and the Bhaiṣajyaguru Cult in Fifth- and Sixth-Century China / Shi Zhiru -- Buddhist Healing Practices at Dunhuang in the Medieval Period / Catherine Despeux -- Empowering the Pregnancy Sash in Medieval Japan / Anna Andreeva -- Ritualizing Moxibustion in the Early Medieval Tendai-Jimon Lineage / Andrew Macomber
Summary "From its inception in northeastern India in the first millennium BCE, the Buddhist tradition has advocated a range of ideas and practices that were said to ensure health and well-being. As the religion developed and spread to other parts of Asia, healing deities were added to its pantheon, monastic institutions became centers of medical learning, and healer-monks gained renown for their mastery of ritual and medicinal therapeutics. In China, imported Buddhist knowledge contended with a sophisticated, state-supported system of medicine that was able to retain its influence among the elite. Further afield in Japan, where Chinese Buddhism and Chinese medicine were introduced simultaneously as part of the country's adoption of civilization from the "Middle Kingdom," the two were reconciled by individuals who deemed them compatible. In East Asia, Buddhist healing would remain a site of intercultural tension and negotiation. While participating in transregional networks of circulation and exchange, Buddhist clerics practiced locally specific blends of Indian and Indigenous therapies and occupied locally defined social positions as religious and medical specialists. In this diverse and compelling collection, an international group of scholars analyzes the historical connections between Buddhism and healing in medieval China and Japan. They focus on the transnationally conveyed aspects of Buddhist healing traditions as they moved across geographic, cultural, and linguistic boundaries. Simultaneously, their work also investigates the local instantiations of these ideas and practices as they were reinvented, altered, and re-embedded in specific social and institutional contexts. Investigating the interplay between the macro and micro, the global and the local, this book demonstrates the richness of Buddhist healing as a way to explore the history of cross-cultural exchange"-- Provided by publisher
Notes Description based upon print version of record
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Subject Healing -- Religious aspects -- Buddhism.
Buddhism -- China -- History.
Buddhism -- Japan -- History.
Buddhism -- Rituals.
RELIGION / Buddhism / History.
Buddhism
Buddhism -- Rituals
Healing -- Religious aspects -- Buddhism
China
Japan
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
Author Macomber, Andrew
Andreeva, Anna
Despeux, Catherine
Richter, Antje
Ng, Zhiru
ISBN 9780824884239
082488423X
9780824884222
0824884221