Cahiers d'Extrême-Asie n°16. Rethinking Medieval Shinto / Repenser le Shinto médiéval
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Contents -Michael Como, To Our Readers From Place to Texts -Allan G. Grapard, Medieval Shinto Boundaries: Real or Imaginary? - Michael Como, Immigrant Gods on the Road to Jindo - Ito Satoshi, The Medieval Cult of Gyoki and Ise Shrines: Concerning the narratives of Gyoki's Pilgrimage to Ise - Anna Andreeva, The Origins of the Miwa Lineage - Abe Yasuro, Shinto as Written Representation : The Phases and Shifts of Medieval Shinto Texts Iconology, Buddhism - Lucia Dolce, Duality and the Kami: the ritual Iconography and Visual Constructions of Medieval Shinto - Kadoya Atsushi, On the Formation of Shinto Icons - Brian O. Ruppert, Royal Progresses to Shrines: Cloistered Sovereign, Tenno, and the Sacred Sites of Early Medieval Japan - Jacqueline I. Stone, Do Kami Ever Overlook Pollution? Honji suijaku and the problem of Death Defilement - William M. Bodiford, Matara: A Dream King Between Insight and Imagination Theoretical Perspective, Imperial Ideology - Iyanaga Nobumi, Medieval Shinto as a Form of Japanese Hinduism : An Attempt at Understanding Early Medieval Shinto - Fabio Rambelli, Re-positioning the Gods: “Medieval Shinto” and the origins of Non-Buddist Discourses on the Kami - Bernhard Scheid, Memories of the Divine Age: Shinto Seen Through Jan Assman's Concepts of Religion - Sueki Fumihiko, La place des divinités locales, des bouddhas et du Tenno dans le shinto médiéval : en particulier la théorie de Jihen Comptes rendus / Book Reviews Auteurs du present volume / Contributors to this Volume
