Global and Domestic Challenges Confronting Buddhist Institutions in Japan

With the rise of globalization in the past twenty years, the positioning of religious belief and activity worldwide has become increasingly complicated due to new information technologies, immigration flows, corporate restructuring and transnational finance. This paper identifies five factors that n...

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Main Author: John Nelson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Lucerne 2015-02-01
Series:Journal of Global Buddhism
Online Access:http://www.globalbuddhism.org/jgb/index.php/jgb/article/view/117
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spelling doaj-a5719475a47d4dcab9631d39cd7efa572020-11-24T22:31:10ZengUniversity of LucerneJournal of Global Buddhism1527-64572015-02-01120115118Global and Domestic Challenges Confronting Buddhist Institutions in JapanJohn Nelson0University of San FranciscoWith the rise of globalization in the past twenty years, the positioning of religious belief and activity worldwide has become increasingly complicated due to new information technologies, immigration flows, corporate restructuring and transnational finance. This paper identifies five factors that not only characterize late modern societies but also create conditions to which religions must adapt, or ignore at their peril. Using Buddhist temples, priests, and their surrounding communities in Japan as case studies, the paper traces how social forces such as 1) a “crisis of orientation,” 2) corporate and bureaucratic restructuring, 3) consumer culture, 4) individualization within a “risk” society, and 5) experimental approaches to spirituality impact religious practice and institutions. Without a perspective that incorporates the global into the local (but still acknowledges the power of individual agency), our analysis of religious activities remains parochial and sociocentric.http://www.globalbuddhism.org/jgb/index.php/jgb/article/view/117
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author John Nelson
spellingShingle John Nelson
Global and Domestic Challenges Confronting Buddhist Institutions in Japan
Journal of Global Buddhism
author_facet John Nelson
author_sort John Nelson
title Global and Domestic Challenges Confronting Buddhist Institutions in Japan
title_short Global and Domestic Challenges Confronting Buddhist Institutions in Japan
title_full Global and Domestic Challenges Confronting Buddhist Institutions in Japan
title_fullStr Global and Domestic Challenges Confronting Buddhist Institutions in Japan
title_full_unstemmed Global and Domestic Challenges Confronting Buddhist Institutions in Japan
title_sort global and domestic challenges confronting buddhist institutions in japan
publisher University of Lucerne
series Journal of Global Buddhism
issn 1527-6457
publishDate 2015-02-01
description With the rise of globalization in the past twenty years, the positioning of religious belief and activity worldwide has become increasingly complicated due to new information technologies, immigration flows, corporate restructuring and transnational finance. This paper identifies five factors that not only characterize late modern societies but also create conditions to which religions must adapt, or ignore at their peril. Using Buddhist temples, priests, and their surrounding communities in Japan as case studies, the paper traces how social forces such as 1) a “crisis of orientation,” 2) corporate and bureaucratic restructuring, 3) consumer culture, 4) individualization within a “risk” society, and 5) experimental approaches to spirituality impact religious practice and institutions. Without a perspective that incorporates the global into the local (but still acknowledges the power of individual agency), our analysis of religious activities remains parochial and sociocentric.
url http://www.globalbuddhism.org/jgb/index.php/jgb/article/view/117
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