The Editing Process of Hirata Atsutane's Senkyo ibun : Between Narrative and Writing, 120, 7, 1, 20, Jul. 2019
55, 147, 161, Nov. 2018, 宮地 正人;遠藤 潤;三ツ松 誠;阪本 是丸;松本 久史
55, 128, 137, Nov. 2018
2, 79, 106, Mar. 2016
Hirata Atsutane's Criticism against Buddhism and Buddhists' Objections in Late Tokugawa Era, 47, 1, 26p., Mar. 2016
Kami-Buddha Relations at Holy Mountains in the Early Modern Period, 228, 37, 57, Oct. 2012
A Temporary Catalog of The Historical Materials of Hatano Family Owned by Kokugakuin University Museum, Transactions of the Organization for Advancement of Research and Development, 3, 103, 132, Mar. 2011
Arguments about Yomi no kuni : The Cosmology and Afterlife of Hirata Kokugaku in Modern Japan(Academic Understanding of Spirits and Political Movements in 19th-century Japan: A Focus on Suzunoya and Ibukinoya,Panels,THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE SIXTY-NINTH ANNUAL CONVENTION OF THE JAPANESE ASSOCIATION FOR RELIGIOUS STUDIES), ENDO Jun, Journal of religious studies, 84, 4, 964, 965, 2011, Japanese Association for Religious Studies
Gold and silver inlay memo book, ;;, Bulletin of the National Museum of Japanese History, 146, 3, 384, Mar. 2009
Miyaji Naokazu: an introduction to his life as a bureaucrat and academic career, Bulletin of Research Center for Traditional Culture, Kokugakuin University, 1, 163, 172, Mar. 2009
Gold and silver inlay memo book, ;;, Bulletin of the National Museum of Japanese History, 146, 3, 384, Mar. 2009
;, Religion and Society, 12, 0, 211, 215, 2006, The Japanese Association for the Study of Religion and Society
The School of Hirata Atsutane and Funerals and Memorial Services in the Shinto Style(Thoughts and Practices of the Shinto Theologians during the Early Modern Japan,Open Thematic Panels), ENDO Jun, Journal of religious studies, 79, 4, 1003, 1004, 2006, Japanese Association for Religious Studies
40, 25, 49, Dec. 2004
Kami and Ancestor in Japanese Context : Focusing on the 19th Century, 1, 182, 197, 25 Mar. 2003
186, 59, 62, Apr. 2002
2002, 283, 301, 2002
An Introduction to a New Approach to Hirata Atsutane and His School : On National Learning and Practice of Reading, Annual review of religious studies., 19, 127, 136, 2001
Journal of Japanese intellectual history, 32, 52, 56, 2000
Late Tokugawa Society and Religious Restorationist Movements (Focusing on the Roles of the Shirakawa House of Shintoists, the Hirata School of Nativism, and Furukawa Mitsura), ENDO Jun, Transaction of the institute for Japanese culture and classics, 83, 135, 178, 1999
The Shinto Funeral Movement in Early Modern Japan, ;, Transactions of the Institute for Japanese Culture and Classics, 82, 312, 282, Sep. 1998
Journal of religious studies, 69, 2, p363, 387, Sep. 1995, Hirata Atsutane(1776-1843), who is one of the welknown scholars of Kokugaku (National learning), advanced a new theory cocerning cosmology and the world of the death based on the traditional cosmology in Japanese religions ,under the influence of cosmology of astronomy in Yogaku(European learning). Motoori
Norinaga, by whom Atsutane was most influenced, first tried to abstruct cosmology from Kojiki, and his dsciple Hattori Nakatsune and Hirata formed their own cosmology not necessarily by interpreting the sacred books, and cosidered it in connection with the world of the death. There are supposed to be three aims in Hirata's writing the text Tama no Mihashira, to understand
the genesis of the world, to comprehend the meaning of the sacred books, and to make clear where to go after the death, and the last one was most important for him. In order to understand that world he insisted on Japanese way of 'Anjin' in opposition to Budhism with which the term is entirely original. Atstane also considered every motion of the world, whose cause Yogaku had ignored, as the works of Musubi, and established the world after death without
conflict with scientific cosmology by identifying the distinction between 'Ken' and 'Yu' in Nihonshoki with such ones as between man and gods, alive and dead, and visible and invisible.
Shinto, Buddhism, and Shinsosai movement in the Community : A case study of Itoshiro, Annual review of religious studies., 10, p53, 69, 1992, In the Edo era, people were obliged to hold funerals following the buddhist tradition, but there arose movements to encourage shinto funerals, or "Shinsosai". Usually Shinsosai movements in the Meiji era are considered to be different from ones in the Edo era and are connected with the Meiji Restoration as a social chan ge. However, we can identify a longer social change behind these movements, by paying attention to the preceding history. In this paper, we focus on the case of Itoshiro, a community in central Japan, and seek to understand the relationship between its history and the Shinsosai movement. The shrine called Chukyo-sha had great importance in Itoshiro, but late in the Edo era Jodo-shinshu increased its influence in this area, which contributed to the religious conflict, resulting in strife in the Horeki era. The shogunate tried to settle it by admitting to only the Yoshida-ke the control of Chukyo-sha, but even after this settlement, the conflict continued. Consequently, although the Shinsosai movement which arose in Itoshiro early in the Meiji era was accompanied by Shinbutsu-Bunri (the separation of Shintoism from Buddhism) and Haibutsu-kishaku (the destruction of buddhist temples and objects), it was also affected by this previous conflict.
Religion and Society, 9, 0, 198, 203, 2003, The Japanese Association for the Study of Religion and Society
INOUE Tomokatsu, Four Hundred Years of Yoshida Shinto and the Yoshida Family, ENDO Jun, Journal of religious studies, 88, 1, 164, 169, 2014, Japanese Association for Religious Studies
6, 5, 6, Sep. 2013
Tatsunori Tokuhashi, "A Study of Koretari Yoshikawa's Interpretation of Nihongi", ENDO, Jun, 116, 2, 58, 62, Feb. 2015
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vol.XV(2003-2004) Part 2, 91, 108, 01 Jan. 2007, Shimazono Susumu
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Book Review: Matsumoto Hisashi, Kada Azumamaro's Nativism and History of Shinto, Journal of Shinto Studies, No.201, 第201号, 71, 75, 01 Jan. 2006, The Society of Shinto Studies
vol.XIII(2001-2002), Part 2 , 91, 96, 01 Jan. 2005, Shimazono Susumu
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Religion, An Introductory Bibliography for Japanese Studies,vol.XII(1999-2000) Part 2, 01 Jan. 2003, The Japan Foundation
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第89輯, 281, 364, 01 Mar. 2002, 近世社家文書研究会(杉山林継、中山郁、松本丘、遠藤潤、菅浩二、菅原浩二、菊田龍太郎、松本久史)
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