密教の視覚文化<br>With a Single Glance : Buddhist Icons and Early Mikkyo Vision

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密教の視覚文化
With a Single Glance : Buddhist Icons and Early Mikkyo Vision

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  • 製本 Hardcover:ハードカバー版/ページ数 476 p./サイズ 122 illus., 33 in color
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9780295989204
  • DDC分類 294.39250952

基本説明

This finely crafted study illluminates the sea change marked by Mikkyō visuality in Japanese art history and suggests continuities with eight-century Nara Buddhist forms of representation and praxis.

Full Description


With a Single Glance considers the visual culture of the Japanese esoteric Buddhist tradition, Mikkyo, at the time of its introduction to Japan early in the ninth century. Huge painted mandalas of assembled colorful divinities, hand-held gilt-bronze vajra, and statues on temple altars were more than ritual aids. Cynthea Bogel demonstrates that the visual and visionary impact of Mikkyo material culture was transformatory, not only to the adherent, but at a broad cultural level. Her finely crafted study illuminates the sea change marked by Mikkyo visuality in Japanese art history and suggests continuities with eighth-century Nara Buddhist forms of representation and praxis.The monks Kukai (774-835) and Saicho (767-822) each studied briefly in China. Kukai's Shingon teachings, and to a lesser extent the Tendai Lotus Esotericism formulated by Saicho, introduced to Japan new ritual practices, icons and worship spaces, and literally hundreds of new divinities.Bogel examines the visual components of Mikkyo through a huge range of sources on art and imagery, philosophy and critical theory, religious studies, cognitive science, cultural analysis, and ritual theory. She presents a framework for understanding the sectarian construction of Japanese Esoteric Buddhist art and doctrine and, for the first time, explores the cultural sources and representational practices that define Mikkyo visual culture.Even while Mikkyo enveloped many existing representational and ritual strategies, Bogel demonstrates that it required and fostered a new visionary and artistic means and a "logic of similarity" among imagery, ritual, and practitioner implicit in Mikkyo doctrine. Mikkyo altered the sensory apprehension of the Buddhist realm. Kukai wrote, "With a single glance [at the representations of the mandala divinities] one becomes a Buddha." The book ranges broadly across imagery, place, and time, allowing Buddhist icons and spaces to "look back" and return the viewer's glance, encouraging a historically specific understanding of the visual characteristics and visual efficacy of Mikkyo.

Contents

Acknowledgments IntroductionPART ONE Definitions and Dynamics1. Esoteric Buddhism and Mikkyo2. A Religion of Images3. The Function of Icons and Visuality as FunctionPART TWO Mikkyo Visual Culture and Its Sources4. Kukai and China: Inheriting Mikkyo Visual Culture5. Kukai and Japan: Transmitting Mikkyo Visual CulturePART THREE Visions and Cosmologies6. Sight and Syncretism7. What They Saw: The Image Looks BackPART FOUR Vision, Ritual, and Imagery8. Contemplations and Contemplative Imagery9. Mikkyo Ritual and Imagery within RitualPART FIVE Choreographies of Ritual Space10. Mikkyo Topographies and Palaces11. The Toji Karma MaabalaGlossary of Japanese CharactersNotesSelected Bibliography