
Contents
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The Life of the Buddha as Transmitted to Japan The Life of the Buddha as Transmitted to Japan
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Complications in the Tales of the Life of the Buddha Complications in the Tales of the Life of the Buddha
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The Scope and Position of This Study The Scope and Position of This Study
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The Structure of This Study The Structure of This Study
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Introduction A Buddha without Buddhism
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Published:December 2016
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Abstract
Despite the long-term decline in institutional Buddhism in Japan, retellings and reworkings of the life of the Buddha there remain prominent in the public eye. The Introduction explains that this apparent paradox may be addressed by tracing its deep historical origins and development. From its start, the life of the Buddha in Japan was unusual: even the earliest scriptural versions of the life of the Buddha to become influential in Japan, such as the Guoqu xianzai yinguo jing, vary significantly from the humanist Buddha well known in the Anglophone world; nor does the Buddha in Japan necessarily appear in poses familiar elsewhere in Buddhist Asia, such as the bhumisparsa mudra; and jataka tales of the former lives of the Buddha reached Japan, but largely ceased to be important after its medieval period. The Introduction concludes with a summary of the book structure and individual chapters.
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