Our dead and Yasukuni shrine

This thesis reviews Yasukuni’s symbolic power and transformation from its foundation in 1869 to contemporary times in order to analyze the potent and variant meanings of the Yasukuni symbol. The paramount importance of the site is to ritualize the war dead, whether for national, personal, or religio...

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Main Author: Karchaske, Amanda Rae
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/21987
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-219872015-09-20T17:17:31ZOur dead and Yasukuni shrineKarchaske, Amanda RaeYasukuniShintoMeijiJapanReligionThis thesis reviews Yasukuni’s symbolic power and transformation from its foundation in 1869 to contemporary times in order to analyze the potent and variant meanings of the Yasukuni symbol. The paramount importance of the site is to ritualize the war dead, whether for national, personal, or religious purposes. While examining the shrine’s many functions, this paper does not try to defend or obscure the serious causal effects of the shrine’s symbolic power but to situate the intentions and controversies in a historical context to see how Yasukuni became what it is, and how it remains important to the Japanese. Beyond looking at Yasukuni through its many controversies (mondai), this thesis explains how the shrine has been important and continues to be a highly active ritual site with deep cultural and religious meaning. In order to understand current Japanese opinions of the significance of Yasukuni shrine, fieldwork was undertaken from June 2011 to October 2012. Research was conducted primarily in the Kanagawa prefecture of Japan. The Kanagawa prefecture, close to the Tokyo area, facilitated repeat visits to the shrine.text2013-11-07T15:52:54Z2012-122013-11-07December 20122013-11-07T15:52:54Zapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/21987en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Yasukuni
Shinto
Meiji
Japan
Religion
spellingShingle Yasukuni
Shinto
Meiji
Japan
Religion
Karchaske, Amanda Rae
Our dead and Yasukuni shrine
description This thesis reviews Yasukuni’s symbolic power and transformation from its foundation in 1869 to contemporary times in order to analyze the potent and variant meanings of the Yasukuni symbol. The paramount importance of the site is to ritualize the war dead, whether for national, personal, or religious purposes. While examining the shrine’s many functions, this paper does not try to defend or obscure the serious causal effects of the shrine’s symbolic power but to situate the intentions and controversies in a historical context to see how Yasukuni became what it is, and how it remains important to the Japanese. Beyond looking at Yasukuni through its many controversies (mondai), this thesis explains how the shrine has been important and continues to be a highly active ritual site with deep cultural and religious meaning. In order to understand current Japanese opinions of the significance of Yasukuni shrine, fieldwork was undertaken from June 2011 to October 2012. Research was conducted primarily in the Kanagawa prefecture of Japan. The Kanagawa prefecture, close to the Tokyo area, facilitated repeat visits to the shrine. === text
author Karchaske, Amanda Rae
author_facet Karchaske, Amanda Rae
author_sort Karchaske, Amanda Rae
title Our dead and Yasukuni shrine
title_short Our dead and Yasukuni shrine
title_full Our dead and Yasukuni shrine
title_fullStr Our dead and Yasukuni shrine
title_full_unstemmed Our dead and Yasukuni shrine
title_sort our dead and yasukuni shrine
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/21987
work_keys_str_mv AT karchaskeamandarae ourdeadandyasukunishrine
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