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Mount Fuji: Icon of Japan
Contributor(s): Earhart, H. Byron (Author)

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ISBN: 1611170001     ISBN-13: 9781611170009
Publisher: University of South Carolina Press
OUR PRICE: $39.89  

Binding Type: Hardcover - See All Available Formats & Editions
Published: October 2011
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Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Religion | Shintoism
- Religion | Comparative Religion
- Religion | Eastern
Dewey: 299.561
LCCN: 2011012498
Physical Information: 0.9" H x 6.3" W x 9.1" L (1.15 lbs) 272 pages
Features: Bibliography, Illustrated, Index
Review Citations: Choice 02/01/2012
Reference and Research Bk News 12/01/2011 pg. 12
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

Illustrated with color and black-and-white images of the mountain and its associated religious practices, H. Byron Earhart's study utilizes his decades of fieldwork--including climbing Fuji with three pilgrimage groups--and his research into Japanese and Western sources to offer a comprehensive overview of the evolving imagery of Mount Fuji from ancient times to the present day. Included in the book is a link to his twenty-eight minute streaming video documentary of Fuji pilgrimage and practice, Fuji: Sacred Mountain of Japan.

Beginning with early reflections on the beauty and power associated with the mountain in medieval Japanese literature, Earhart examines how these qualities fostered spiritual practices such as Shugendo, which established rituals and a temple complex at the mountain as a portal to an ascetic otherworld. As a focus of worship, the mountain became a source of spiritual insight, rebirth, and prophecy through the practitioners Kakugyo and Jikigyo, whose teachings led to social movements such as Fujido (the way of Fuji) and to a variety of pilgrimage confraternities making images and replicas of the mountain for use in local rituals.

Earhart shows how the seventeenth-century commodification of Mount Fuji inspired powerful interpretive renderings of the peerless mountain of Japan, such as those of the nineteenth-century print masters Hiroshige and Hokusai, which were largely responsible for creating the international reputation of Mount Fuji. In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, images of Fuji served as an expression of a unique and superior Japanese culture. With its distinctive shape firmly embedded in Japanese culture but its ethical, ritual, and spiritual associations made malleable over time, Mount Fuji came to symbolize ultranationalistic ambitions in the 1930s and early 1940s, peacetime democracy as early as 1946, and a host of artistic, naturalistic, and commercial causes, even the exotic and erotic, in the decades since.


Contributor Bio(s): Earhart, Byron H.: - H. Byron Earhart is an emeritus Professor of comparative religion at Western Michigan University and the author Japanese Religion: Unity and Diversity, Religions of Japan: Many Traditions within One Sacred Way, and other books.
 
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