Preview

Yearbook Japan

Advanced search

Amidaist Practices in Zoku Honchō Ōjōden

https://doi.org/10.24412/2687-1440-2021-50-250-264

Abstract

The article discusses practices for reaching rebirth in the Pure Land recounted in the Zoku Honchō Ōjōden (“Continuation of the Biographies of Japanese Reborn Into the Pure Land”), composed in 1101–1111 by Ōe-no Masafusa. These practices include those mentioned in the stories as being performed during one’s lifetime, intended to show one’s strong devotion to Pure Land, as well as death-bed practices: the description of the death hour is the crucial point of every biography. Some of these practices belong to the Pure Land tradition (the most important to be mentioned is nembutsu, “recollection of the Buddha (Amida)”), while others are more likely to be attributed to different traditions (the most important is reading and reciting the Lotus Sutra): the author obviously does not feel any need to draw a line between them. Normally, these practices are only mentioned in the text and not discussed in detail. This aspect of Zoku Honchō Ōjōden is analyzed in comparison with other important Pure Land texts: Nihon Ōjō Gokuraku-ki (Japanese Records of Rebirth in the Land of Supreme Joy) by Yoshishige-no Yasutane and Ōjōyōshū (The Essentials of Rebirth in the Pure Land) by Genshin. As compared to Nihon Ōjō Gokuraku-ki, in Zoku Honchō Ōjōden, much more emphasis is placed on the death-bed practices than on the lifetime actions and evidence of rebirth. Often, the text focuses on the state of mind of the dying person, his or her determination in performing death-bed practices. In his work, Ōe-no Masafusa leans on the idea expressed in Ōjōyōshū that these are the last moments of life that are decisive and determine one’s rebirth, illustrating it with examples.

About the Author

A. A. Petrova
Institute of Oriental Studies, Russian Academy of Sciences
Russian Federation

Petrova Anastasia A., PhD, researcher

107031 Moscow, Rozhdestvenka Street 12



References

1. Andrews, A. (1989). Genshin’s “Essentials of Pure Land Rebirth” and the transmission of Buddhism to Japan. Part I. The first and second phases of transmission of Pure Land Buddhism to Japan: The Nara Period and the early Heian Period. The Pacific World, 5, 20–32.

2. Avdyushenkova, I. (2015). Pamyatovanie o budde v predsmertnyi chas. Instruktsii po predsmertnym ritual’nym praktikam v «Ōjōyōshū». [Recalling of Buddha at the Death Hour. Instructions for the Deathbed Practices in Ōjōyōshū]. In I. Smirnov, Meshcheryakov (eds.), Istoriya i kultura traditsionnoi Yaponii [History and Culture of Traditional Japan], 8 (pp. 86–89). Saint Petersburg: Giperion. (In Russian).

3. Horton, S. (2004). The Influence of the Ōjōyōshū in Late Tenth- and Early Eleventh- Century Japan. Japanese Journal of Religious Studies, 31/1, 29–54.

4. Horton, S. (2008). Mukaekō: Practice for the deathbed. In J. Stone, M. Namba (eds.), Death and the Afterlife in Japanese Buddhism (pp. 27–60). University of Hawaii Press. DOI:10.1515/9780824862152-003

5. Nakao, M. (1980). Zoku Honchō ōjōden no ōjōkan [View of rebirth in Zoku Honchō ōjōden]. Indogaku Bukkyogaku Kenkyu [Journal of Indian and Buddhist Studies], 29(1), 361–364. (In Japanese).

6. Ōjō Gokurakki (2001) (transl. by A. N. Mescheryakov). In Volshebnaya Yaponiya [Magical Japan] (pp. 240–256). Saint Petersburg: Severo-zapad press. (In Russian).

7. Rhodes, R. F. (2007) Ōjōyōshū, Nihon Ōjō Gokuraku-ki, and the Construction of Pure Land Discourse in Heian Japan. Japanese Journal of Religious Studies, 34/2, 249–270.

8. Stone, J. (2016) Right Thoughts at the Last Moment: Buddhism and Deathbed Practices in Early Medieval Japan. Honolulu: University of Hawai’i Press.

9. Takeuchi, K. (1996) Ōjōden ni mirareru kassatsu ni tsuite [About kassatsu in ōjōden]. Indogaku Bukkyogaku Kenkyu [Journal of Indian and Buddhist Studies], 44(2), 653–657. (In Japanese).

10. Trubnikova, N., Bachurin A. (2009). Istoriya religii Yaponii [History of Japanese Religions]. Moscow: Natalis. (In Russian).

11. Zoku Honchō ōjōden (1980). In Nihon shisō taikei. Vol. 7 (pp. 569– 580). Tokyo: Iwanami. (In Japanese).


Review

For citations:


Petrova A.A. Amidaist Practices in Zoku Honchō Ōjōden. Yearbook Japan. 2021;50:250-264. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.24412/2687-1440-2021-50-250-264

Views: 289


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.


ISSN 2687-1432 (Print)
ISSN 2687-1440 (Online)