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A Shinto Bibliography in English
Selected by John Breen & Mark Teeuwen
Abe, Ryuichi, 1999. The weaving of mantra: Kukai and the constitution of esoteric Buddhist discourse. Columbia University Press.
Adolphson, Mikael, 1997. Enryakuji - An old power in a new era. In: Jeffrey Mass,ed. The origins of Japan’s medieval world. Stanford University Press.
Adolphson, Mikael, 2000. The gates of power. University of Hawai‘i Press.
Ambros, Barbara, 2008. Emplacing a pilgrimage: The Oyama cult and regional religion in early modern Japan. Harvard University, Asia Center.
Aston, W.G., 1972. Nihongi: Chronicles of Japan from the earliest times to A.D. 697. Tuttle
Bentley, John R., 2006. The authenticity of Sendai kuji hongi. Brill.
Blacker, Carmen, 1990. The shinza or God-seat in the Daijosai: throne, bed, or incubation couch? Japanese Journal of Religious Studies, 17.
Bock, Felicia, 1970. Engi-shiki: Procedures of the Engi era, vol. 1. Sophia University Press.
Bock, Felicia, 1972. Engi-shiki: Procedures of the Engi era, vol. 2. Sophia University Press.
Bocking, Brian, 2001. The Oracles of the Three Shrines: Windows on Japanese Religion. Routledge.
Bowring, Richard, 2005. The religious traditions of Japan, 500-1600. Cambridge : Cambridge University Press.
Breen, John, 1990. Shintoists in Restoration Japan: towards a reassessment. Modern Asian Studies, 24 (3).
Breen, John, 2000. Ideologues, bureaucrats and priests: on Buddhism and Shinto in early Meiji Japan. In: Breen and Teeuwen, eds, 2000.
Breen, John, 2003. 'Shinto and Christianity: a history of conflict and compromise' in Mark Mullins ed., Handbook of Christianity in Japan, Brill, 2003. ISSN 09215239
Breen, John, 2004a. 'The dead and the living in the land of peace: a sociology of Yasukuni’. Mortality, 9 (1).
Breen, John, 2007b. Inside Tokugawa religion: Stars, Planets and the Calendar-as- method. Culture and cosmos, 10 (1-2).
Breen, John, ed., 2008. Yasukuni, the war dead and the struggle for Japan’s past. Columbia University Press.
Breen, John, 2008a. Introduction: a Yasukuni genealogy. In: John Breen, ed., 2008.
Breen, John. 2008b. Yasukuni and the loss of historical memory. In: John Breen, ed., 2008.
Breen, John and Mark Teeuwen, eds, 2000. Shinto in history: ways of the kami. University of Hawai‘i Press 2000.
Como, Michael, 2008. Shotoku: Ethnicity, ritual, and violence in the Japanese Buddhist tradition. Oxford University Press.
Como, Michael, forthcoming. Weaving and binding: Female shamans and immigrant gods in Nara Japan. University of Hawai‘i Press.
Davis, Winston, 1992. Japanese religion and society: paradigms of structure and change. New York: State University of New York Press.
DeCaroli, Robert, 2004. Haunting the Buddha. Oxford University Press.
Ellwood, Robert, 1970. The Feast of kingship: accession ceremonies in ancient Japan. Sophia University Press.
Endo Jun, 1998. The Shinto funeral movement in early modern and modern Japan. Transactions of the Institute for Japanese culture and Classics, 82.
Faure, Bernard, 1998. The red tread: Buddhist approaches to sexuality. Princeton University Press.
Grapard, Allan, 1988. Institution, ritual, and ideology: The twenty-two shrine-temple multiplexes of Heian Japan. History of Religions, 27.
Grapard, Allan, 1992a. The protocol of the gods: A study of the Kasuga cult in Japanese history. University of California Press.
Grapard, Allan, 1992b. The Shinto of Yoshida Kanetomo. Monumenta Nipponica, 47 (1).
Grapard. Allan, 2002. Shrines registered in ancient Japanese law: Shinto or not? Japanese Journal of Religious Studies, 29 (3-4).
Hardacre, Helen, 1989. Shinto and the state, 1868-1988. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press.
Hardacre, Helen, 2002. Religion and society in 19th century Japan. Centre for Japanese studies, University of Michigan Ann Arbor.
Imaizumi Yoshiko, 2007. Contested Space: a Genealogy of Meiji Shrine. London University, unpublished PhD thesis.
Inoue Nobutaka, 2002. The formation of sect Shinto in modernizing Japan. Japanese Journal of Religious Studies, 29 (3-4).
Inoue Nobutaka et al., 2003. Shinto: a short history (translated and adapted by Mark Teeuwen and John Breen). London and New York: RoutledgeCurzon.
Isomae Jun’ichi, 2000. Reappropriating the Japanese myths: Motoori Norinaga and the creation myths of the Kojiki and Nihon shoki. Japanese Journal of Religious Studies, 27 (1-2)
Kamikawa Michio. 1990. Accession rituals and Buddhism in Medieval Japan. Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 17 (2-3).
Klein, Susan B., 2002. Allegories of desire. Harvard University Press.
Konoshi Takamitsu, 2000. Constructing imperial mythology: Kojiki and Nihon shoki. In: Haruo Shirane and Tomi Suzuki, eds, Inventing the classics. Stanford University Press.
Kuroda Toshio, 1981. Shinto in the history of Japanese religion. Journal of Japanese Studies, 7 (1).
Meri Arichi, 2006. Sanno miya mandara: The iconography of Pure Land of this earth. Japanese Journal of Religious Studies, 33 (2).
Mills, D.E., 1970. A collection of tales from Uji. Cambridge University Press.
Moerman, Max, 2005. Localizing paradise. Harvard University Press.
Motoori Norinaga,1991. ‘Naobi no mitama’. Trans. by Sey Nishimura, in: The Way of the Gods: Motoori Norinaga's Naobi no Mitama. Monumenta Nipponica, 46:1.
Muller, Gerhild, 1971. Kagura: Die Lieder der Kagura-Zeremonie am Naishidokoro. Harrassowitz.
Nakai, Kate W., 1988. Shogunal Politics: Arai Hakuseki and the Premises of Tokugawa Rule. Harvard East Asian Monograph. Harvard University Press.
Nakai, Kate W., 2007. The Age of the Gods in medieval and early modern historiography. In: James C. Baxter and Joshua A. Vogel, eds, Writing histories in Japan. Kyoto: International Research Center for Japanese Studies.
Nelson, John, 1996. A Year in the Life of a Shinto Shrine. University of Washington Press.
Nelson, John, 2000. Enduring identities: the guise of Shinto in contemporary Japan.University of Hawai'i Press.
Nitta Hitoshi, 2000. Shinto as a ‘non-religion’: The origins and development of an idea. In: Breen and Teeuwen, eds, 2000.
Nitta Hitoshi, 2008. And why shouldn’t the Prime Minister worship at Yasukuni? In: Breen, ed, 2008.
Ono Sokyo, 1962. Shinto: the kami way. Tuttle.
Ooms, Herman, 1985. Tokugawa ideology: early constructs, 1570-1680. Princeton University Press.
Ooms, Herman, 2008. Imperial politics and symbolics in imperial Japan: The Tenmu dynasty. University of Hawai‘i Press.
Philippi, Donald L., 1969. Kojiki. University of Tokyo Press.
Plutschow, Herbert, 1996. Matsuri: The festivals of Japan. Surrey: Japan Library.
Ponsonby-Fane, Richard A.B., 1959. The Imperial House of Japan, Kyoto: Ponsonby-Fane Memorial Society.
Reader, Ian. 1994. Religion in contemporary. Macmillan.
Reader, Ian and George J. Tanabe, Jr. 1998. Practically religious : worldly benefits and the common religion of Japan. Honolulu : University of Hawai`i Press.
Rimer, J. Thomas and Yamazaki Masakazu, 1984. On the art of no drama: the major treatises of Zeami. Princeton University Press.
Sakamoto Koremaru, 2000. The structure of state Shinto: Its creation, development and demise. In: Breen and Teeuwen, eds, 2000.
Sasaki Kiyoshi, 1998. Amenominakanushi no kami in late Tokugawa period Kokugaku’, in Inoue Nobutaka ed. Contemporary Papers on Japanese Religion 4: Kami, The Institute for Japanese Culture and Classics, Kokugakuin University.
Scheid, Bernhard, 2000. Reading the Yuiitsu shinto myobo yoshu: A Modern Exegesis of an Esoteric Shinto Text. In: Breen and Teeuwen, eds, 2000.
Scheid, Bernhard, 2001. Der Eine and Einzige Weg der Gotter: Yoshida Kanetomo und die Erfindung des Shinto. Verlag der Osterreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften.
Scheid, Bernhard and Mark Teeuwen, eds, 2006. The culture of secrecy in Japanese religion. Routledge.
Selden, Mark, 2008. Japan, the United States and Yasukuni Nationalism: War, Historical Memory and the Future of the Asia Pacific. Japan Focus,1215.
Smyers, Karen, 1999. The fox and the jewel: shared and private meanings in contemporary Inari worship. University of Hawai‘i Press.
Stone, Jacqueline, 1999. Original enlightenment and the transformation of meieval Japanese Buddhism. University of Hawai‘i Press.
Paul L. Swanson & Clark Chilson, eds. 2005. Nanzan Guide to Japanese Religions, University of Hawaii Press.
Teeuwen, Mark, 1996. Watarai Shinto: An intellectual history of the Outer Shrine of Ise. Leiden: CNWS Publications.
Teeuwen, Mark, 2000. The kami in esoteric Buddhist thought and practice. In: Breen and Teeuwen, eds, 2000.
Teeuwen, Mark, 2002. From jindo to Shinto: A concept takes shape. Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 29 (3-4).
Teeuwen, Mark, and Fabio Rambelli, eds, 2003. Buddhas and kami in Japan: Honji suijaku as a combinatory paradigm. RoutledgeCurzon.
Teeuwen, Mark, 2007a. Comparative perspectives on the emergence of jindo and Shinto. Bulletin of SOAS, 70 (2).
Teeuwen, Mark, 2007b. Sendai kuji hongi: Authentic myths or forged history? Monumenta Nipponica 62 (1).
Ten Grotenhuis, Elizabeth, 1999. Japanese mandalas. University of Hawai‘i Press.
Thal, Sarah, 2005. Rearranging the landscape of the gods. The University of Chicago Press.
Thornhill III, Arthur H., 1993. Six circles, one dewdrop: The religio-aesthetic world of Konparu Zenchiku. Princeton University Press.
Tyler, Royall, 2003. The tale of Genji. New York: Penguin Books.
Vlastos, Stephen, ed., 1998. Mirror of modernity: Invented traditions of modern Japan. University of California Press.
Wakabayashi, Bob Tadashi, 1986. Anti-foreignism and Western Learning in early modern Japan: The New Theses of 1825. Harvard East Asian Monograph. Harvard University Press.
Witzel, Michael, 2005. Vala and Iwato: The myth of the hidden sun in India, Japan, and beyond. Electronic Journal of Vedic Studies, 12 (1).
 
 
 

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