Submitted to Program Units |
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1: Buddhism Unit and Japanese Religions Unit |
Abstract for Online Program Book (maximum 150 words)
Followers of the Buddhist reformer Nichiren (1222-1282) have made his willingness to strongly admonish people and practices deemed slanderous of the true Dharma, no matter their power or status, into a core feature of Nichiren Buddhism. This panel brings together three researchers who consider ways Nichiren Buddhists from the thirteenth century to the present have influenced Japan’s religio-political order through risky rebuke. The papers introduce contrasting applications of Nichiren Buddhist admonishing that reveal how uncompromising confrontations with heterodoxy both destabilize and construct institutions and their practices. By considering how adherents’ defense of orthodoxy inspires self-legitimizing claims that invert doctrinal and temporary authority, and by analyzing examples of self-sacrificing admonishing from a wide historical range, these papers suggest ways attention to Nichiren’s rebukes helps us understand how religions take shape through conflict.
Papers
- “Admonishing the State”: Challenging Worldly Authority in the Nichiren Buddhist Tradition
- Remonstrating in Modern Japan: An Analysis of Tanaka Chigaku’s Kokka kangyō as Media Event
- An Inverted Rebuke: How Nichiren Buddhist Remonstration Turned Inward in Soka Gakkai