Senin, 27 Desember 2010

[B197.Ebook] Ebook Download Shinto the Kami Way, by Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard

Ebook Download Shinto the Kami Way, by Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard

When someone needs to visit guide stores, search shop by store, rack by shelf, it is very bothersome. This is why we supply guide compilations in this web site. It will reduce you to browse guide Shinto The Kami Way, By Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard as you such as. By looking the title, author, or writers of guide you really want, you could locate them rapidly. Around the house, workplace, or even in your way can be all ideal place within internet links. If you want to download and install the Shinto The Kami Way, By Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard, it is very easy after that, since now we proffer the connect to buy and make deals to download Shinto The Kami Way, By Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard So very easy!

Shinto the Kami Way, by Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard

Shinto the Kami Way, by Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard



Shinto the Kami Way, by Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard

Ebook Download Shinto the Kami Way, by Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard

Shinto The Kami Way, By Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard When writing can transform your life, when composing can improve you by supplying much money, why do not you try it? Are you still extremely baffled of where getting the ideas? Do you still have no suggestion with just what you are visiting create? Currently, you will certainly need reading Shinto The Kami Way, By Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard A good author is a great reader simultaneously. You can define how you write depending upon exactly what publications to read. This Shinto The Kami Way, By Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard could assist you to fix the trouble. It can be among the best sources to establish your composing skill.

Do you ever before know guide Shinto The Kami Way, By Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard Yeah, this is an extremely interesting book to read. As we told previously, reading is not type of commitment activity to do when we have to obligate. Checking out must be a habit, a good behavior. By checking out Shinto The Kami Way, By Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard, you could open up the new world and also get the power from the globe. Every little thing can be obtained through guide Shinto The Kami Way, By Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard Well in short, publication is really effective. As exactly what we supply you here, this Shinto The Kami Way, By Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard is as one of checking out book for you.

By reviewing this book Shinto The Kami Way, By Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard, you will certainly obtain the very best thing to acquire. The new point that you don't have to spend over cash to reach is by doing it on your own. So, just what should you do now? Visit the link web page and download and install the e-book Shinto The Kami Way, By Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard You can get this Shinto The Kami Way, By Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard by on the internet. It's so simple, right? Nowadays, technology really supports you activities, this on the internet book Shinto The Kami Way, By Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard, is as well.

Be the initial to download this publication Shinto The Kami Way, By Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard and allow checked out by surface. It is very simple to read this book Shinto The Kami Way, By Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard considering that you do not should bring this printed Shinto The Kami Way, By Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard everywhere. Your soft data e-book can be in our gizmo or computer system so you can delight in checking out everywhere and also whenever if needed. This is why great deals numbers of people additionally read the books Shinto The Kami Way, By Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard in soft fie by downloading and install the publication. So, be one of them which take all advantages of checking out guide Shinto The Kami Way, By Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard by online or on your soft documents system.

Shinto the Kami Way, by Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard

"An excellently rounded introduction by an eminent Shinto scholar."—Library Journal

Shinto, the indigenous faith of the Japanese people, continues to fascinate and mystify both the casual visitor to Japan and the long-time resident. Relatively unknown among the religions of the world, Shinto: The Kami Way provides an enlightening window into this Japanese faith.

In its general aspects Shinto is more than a religious faith. It is an amalgam of attitudes, ideas, and ways of doing things that through two millennia and more have become an integral part of the way of the Japanese people. Shinto is both a personal faith in the kami—objects of worship in Shinto and an honorific for noble, sacred spirits—and a communal way of life according to the mind of the kami. This introduction unveils Shinto's spiritual characteristics and discusses the architecture and function of Shinto shrines. Further examination of Shinto's lively festivals, worship, music, and sacred regalia illustrates Shinto's influence on all levels of Japanese life.

Fifteen photographs, numerous drawings and Dr. Ono's text introduce the reader to two millennia of indigenous Japanese belief in the kami and in communal life.

Chapters include:

  • The Kami Way
  • Shrines
  • Worship and Festivals
  • Political and Social Characteristics
  • Some Spiritual Characteristics

  • Sales Rank: #183457 in Books
  • Brand: Brand: Tuttle Publishing
  • Published on: 2004-04-15
  • Released on: 2004-04-15
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.00" h x .40" w x 5.25" l, .47 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 128 pages
Features
  • Used Book in Good Condition

Review
"An excellently rounded introduction by an eminent Shinto scholar." —Library Journal

About the Author
Dr. Sokyo Ono was a professor at Kokugakuin Daigaku, a Shinto university in Tokyo, and has lectured for the National Association of Shinto Shrines. He also served as Executive Director of the International Institute for the Study of Religions and the Japan Religious Cooperative Council

William Woodard directed the research unit of the Religious and Cultural Resources Division, Civil Information and Education Section, SCAP from 1946 to 1952.

Most helpful customer reviews

105 of 112 people found the following review helpful.
It has its flaws, but its well worth a read
By H. Powell
This is perhaps the best known (and most widely available)introductory treatise of the Shinto religion. While Ono's The Kami Way certainly deserves its notoriety, those who wish a deeper philosophical coverage of this poorly understood religion will be a bit disappointed, for Dr. Ono really just scratches the surface and seldom goes beyond the topics of shrine architecture, ceremonial trappings, and local and national shrine administration. The mythology/cosmology of Shinto is briefly addressed, and I believe that the average western reader will find the nature of Shinto even more perplexing after reading this book for that very reason: Ono calls Shinto "a religion without theology", but no religion is without theology, regardless of how ancient it is (for example, I would have found a few examples of instances of local nature spirits being transformed into Buddhist saints most informative). For those totally unfamiliar with Shinto, I will make this rough comparison: imagin if the ancient European pagan religions had survived the Christian domination of the late Middle Ages and continued to exist in organized forms, occasionally incorporating Christian concepts into their own respective worldviews and religious ceremonies (as Shinto did to a limited extent with the imported Buddhist religion). Despite its scant coverage of actual religious matters, The Kami Way lucidly describes the mundane matters of this faith's temporal administration (and provides much coverage of shrine conditions and inter-provincial/national relations, with an emphasis on comparison between standards before and after World War Two). I highly reccommend this book as an introduction for the curious.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Five Stars
By R. B. C
An excellent overview of Shinto!!!

10 of 10 people found the following review helpful.
An introduction to the un-religion
By Zack Davisson
Originally published in 1960 as "Bulletin #8" from the government-sponsored International Institute for the Study of Religions, "Shinto: The Kami Way" was written to serve as an English-language introduction to Japan's native religion. While somewhat dated in use of language and pictures, the fact that the book is still in print more than fifty years later says that author Ono Sokyo did a good job of it.

And Ono did do a good job. He stayed mostly on the surface, discussed the establishment of shrines, who pays for them and what their role is, who the priests are and what their role is, what are some of the important shrines and architectural style. He writes about the significance of certain objects like the shimenawa rope you see at many shrines, or the costumes of the priests and shrine maidens. He sheds some light on some of the rituals, on the history of Shinto through WWII and after, and the role of Shinto in the home and in the community. This is very much a "nuts and bolts" guide to the world of Shinto.

For the rest, for the nature of kami and the beliefs of Shinto, he simply says:

"It is impossible to make explicit and clear what that which fundamentally by its very nature is vague."

This is the aspect that many Westerners find so mystifying about Shinto. It falls too far outside what they think of as "religion." There are no prophets or holy men, no bible or salvation, no afterlife, no forbidden fruits, no code of moral conduct. Shinto is a life-affirming religion, and all things associated with life; sex, pain, indulgence, lust, joy, abandon; are good. Getting completely drunk and stuffing yourself like a pig on expensive treats is one of the most holy ways to honor the spirits. There is no concept of sin; the most one can be is dirty (the kami like things clean).

Shinto is also not so much a system of beliefs as an organization of rituals and traditions. Even reading some of the reviews for this book, it is clear how difficult a concept this is for people to grasp. One reviewer wanted to see a gallery of images of kami, even though Ono makes it explicit that kami have no form and are never depicted in art. Another reviewer insists that there MUST be a doctrine and theology for Shinto, and somehow Ono didn't include it in his book. But Ono is right. No such thing exists.

In truth, as Ono writes, Shinto is more of a collection of rituals, traditions and superstitions bound up in a very loose belief system. One cannot say "I am Shinto" in the way you would say "I am Buddhist" or "I am Catholic." That would be like saying "I am Christmas" because you put up a tree every year. In fact, most Japanese people have never even heard the word Shinto, and if you told them they were being religious just because they had a shrine at home and participated in the local festivals, they would just laugh at you. These activities are just part of daily life, part of being Japanese. And that is Shinto.

Because Shinto is something you do, not something you think about. Ono puts this succinctly in saying "Shinto is caught, and not taught" and "the strength of Shinto is in its emphasis on sensory experience derived from mystic rites and natural phenomenon rather than on theological discourse."

With this I could not agree with Ono more. As part of my Master's Degree, I have read many books and wrote many papers on Shinto, and no amount of study can really tell you what Shinto is. I would say that I have a strong understanding of the native religion of Japan, but this was gained through experience, through shouldering the heavy mikoshi as we took the local kami on a tour through the town, or burning under giant flaming torches in order to please a local fire kami, or suffering through the ordeal that is the Naked Man Festival from which not everyone comes out alive.

A book like Ono's is never going to be able to truly show you what Shinto is, any more than a book on sushi could really tell you what uni tastes like. They can talk about the history, the cultivation, the preparation, but when it comes to flavor you are really just going to have to try it for yourself.

See all 33 customer reviews...

Shinto the Kami Way, by Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard PDF
Shinto the Kami Way, by Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard EPub
Shinto the Kami Way, by Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard Doc
Shinto the Kami Way, by Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard iBooks
Shinto the Kami Way, by Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard rtf
Shinto the Kami Way, by Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard Mobipocket
Shinto the Kami Way, by Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard Kindle

Shinto the Kami Way, by Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard PDF

Shinto the Kami Way, by Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard PDF

Shinto the Kami Way, by Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard PDF
Shinto the Kami Way, by Sokyo Ono Ph.D., William P. Woodard PDF

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar