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“I Wish They Were All Christians”: On Isabella Bird’s Grapplings with Indigenous Beliefs in Unbeaten Tracks in Japan

  • 간행물
    인문언어 KCI 등재 바로가기
  • 권호(발행년)
    제24권 1호 (2022.06) 바로가기
  • 페이지
    pp.13-44
  • 저자
    Joohyun Park
  • 언어
    영어(ENG)
  • URL
    https://www.earticle.net/Article/A414361

원문정보

초록

영어
The religious aspect of Japanese life has a prominent place in Bird's Unbeaten Tracks in Japan. And her lengthy explications of the irreligious state of Japan contributed greatly in popularizing the image of the passive "Oriental" as they were quoted by those interested in disseminating knowledge on the religious plain of the “Far East.” Despite the importance of religion in Unbeaten Tracks, there are no focused studies of Bird's interpretation of Japan's indigenous religions such as Shinto and Buddhism. This study explores how Bird, even as she acknowledges Japanese modernity, demotes the Japanese to second-rate citizens in the hierarchy of peoples. The double role Japan plays as the modern subject and the “uncivilized Oriental” reveals the flexibility of the Victorian triad, and allows Bird to widen the gap between Japan and the “properly civilized” nations of the West. While there are vociferous locals who refute the premise of the triad, Bird sutures the holes they puncture in her Eurocentric narrative by using plural temporalities.

목차

1. Introduction
2. Bird’s Push Against Ito, the Subversive Shintoist
3. The “Nirvana” Debate and Bird’s Use of Schizogenic Time
4. Conclusion: Bird's Legacy
Works Cited
[Abstract]

저자

  • Joohyun Park [ 박주현 | Catholic University of Korea ]

참고문헌

자료제공 : 네이버학술정보

    간행물 정보

    • 간행물
      인문언어 [LINGUA HUMANITATIS]
    • 간기
      반년간
    • pISSN
      1598-2130
    • 수록기간
      2000~2025
    • 등재여부
      KCI 등재
    • 십진분류
      KDC 705 DDC 405