![]() Women, Rites, and Ritual Objects in Premodern Japan Edited byĬover illustration: Portrait of Jōkō-in, Edo period, hanging scroll, ink and color on silk, 119.5 x 51.5 cm, Jōkōji (now in the collection of the Fukui Prefecture Wakasa History Museum). The titles published in this series are listed at /bjsl Women, Rites, and Ritual Objects in Premodern Japanīrill’s Japanese Studies Library Edited by Joshua Mostow (Managing Editor) Caroline Rose Kate Wildman Nakai Life After Death: The Intersection of Patron and Subject in the Portrait of Jōkō-in (Self) Retired Empress and Buddhist Patron: Higashisanjō-in Donates a Set of Icon Curtains in the Illustrated Legends of Ishiyamadera Handscroll (Morrissey) Of Surplices and Certificates: Tracing Mugai Nyodai’s Kesa (Bethe) Commemorating Life and Death: The Memorial Culture Surrounding the Rinzai Zen Nun Mugai Nyodai (Fister) Connecting Kannon to Women Through Print (Fowler) ![]() The Relic and the Jewel: An Eleventh-Century Miniature Bronze Pagoda to Hold the Bones of a Young Queen (Glassman) A Female Deity as the Focus of a Buddhist Ritual: Kichijō Keka at Hōryūji (Pradel) Taira no Tokushi’s Birth of Emperor Antoku (Gunji) ![]() ![]() Devising the Esoteric Rituals for Women: Fertility and the Demon Mother in the Gushi nintai sanshō himitsu hōshū (Andreeva) Women and “Moving House” Rituals in Mid-Heian Japan (Gerhart) Rituals Related to the Household and Childbirth ![]()
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