
Rage and Ravage
In volumes one and two, The Fluid Pantheon and Predators and Protectors, Faure argued against a polarity or dichotomy between buddhas and kami by emphasizing the existence of deities that did not belong to either category, and he rejected the retrospective notion of ""hybridity."" The present work makes a similar case about the reified distinction between gods and demons to show that, due to the fluid nature of the Japanese pantheon, these terms do not represent stable identities: gods can become demons, and demons are sometimes deified. Divine protectors were often former predators, and in some instances they retained their predatory features even after being converted. After emphasizing the demonic aspects of devas as ""gods or spirits of obstacles"" in the earlier volumes, Faure now focuses on the deva-like or ""divine"" aspects of deities that have been described as ""demonic.""
Rage and Ravage and its companion volumes persuade readers that the gods constituted a central part of medieval Japanese religion and that the latter cannot be reduced to a simplistic confrontation, parallelism, or complementarity between some monolithic teachings known as ""Buddhism"" and ""Shinto."" Once these reductionist labels and categories are discarded, a new and fascinating religious landscape begins to unfold.
- Undertitel
- Gods of Medieval Japan, Volume 3
- Författare
- Bernard Faure
- ISBN
- 9780824886240
- Språk
- Engelska
- Vikt
- 1624 gram
- Utgivningsdatum
- 2022-01-30
- Sidor
- 624
