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was a
Japanese Japanese may refer to: * Something from or related to Japan, an island country in East Asia * Japanese language, spoken mainly in Japan * Japanese people, the ethnic group that identifies with Japan through ancestry or culture ** Japanese diaspor ...
academic, historian and university professor. A specialist in medieval Japanese history and in the history of Japanese thought, he greatly influenced Japanese historiography with several innovative and controversial theories.Dobbins (1996:1) His ideas were the opposite of what mainstream academics at the time believed, and for this reason his name is often at the center of controversies. His work has been called "seminal", "epochal" and "revolutionary". Kuroda's analysis of religion and of its significance is Marxist.


Career

Kuroda is known for having published "Shinto in the History of Japanese Religion," which argued that Shinto as an independent religion took shape only in the modern period, having emerged in the medieval age as an offshoot of
Buddhism Buddhism ( , ), also known as Buddha Dharma and Dharmavinaya (), is an Indian religion or philosophical tradition based on teachings attributed to the Buddha. It originated in northern India as a -movement in the 5th century BCE, and gra ...
.Rambelli, Fabio
"Dismantling stereotypes surrounding Japan's sacred entities,"
''Japan Times.'' July 15, 2001
He is also known for his and " theories. Kuroda's thought and writings influenced the work of such contemporary academics as John Breen and Mark Teeuwen. The Fall 1996, 23/3–4 issue of
Nanzan Institute for Religion and Culture The is one of the largest centers in the world devoted to scholarly research on the interface of philosophy and religions within the East and West. Founded in 1976 on the campus of Nanzan University, it has established itself in Japan and around t ...
's Japanese Journal of Religious Studies was entirely dedicated to him under the title "The Legacy of Kuroda Toshio".


Kuroda's position on Shinto

In his article "Shinto in the History of Japanese Religion", published in English in 1981, Kuroda argued that Shinto as an independent and organized religion was born only in the modern period after emerging in the Middle Ages as an offshoot of Buddhism.Breen and Teuween (2000:4-5) Kuroda's main argument is that Shinto as a distinct religion is a Meiji era invention of Japanese nationalist ideologues. He points out how the state formalization of '' kami'' rituals and the state ranking of shrines during the
Heian period The is the last division of classical Japanese history, running from 794 to 1185. It followed the Nara period, beginning when the 50th emperor, Emperor Kanmu, moved the capital of Japan to Heian-kyō (modern Kyoto). means "peace" in Japane ...
were not the emergence of Shinto as an independent religion, but an effort to explain local beliefs in Buddhist terms. He also claims that, if it's true that the two characters for appear very early in the historical record, for example in the Nihon Shoki, this does not mean today's Shinto already existed as a religion at the time because they were originally used as a name for Taoism or even for religion in general. Indeed, according to Kuroda, many lasting features of Shinto, for example the worship of mirrors and swords or the very structure of Ise Shrine (Shinto's holiest and most important site) are typical of Taoism. The term Shinto in old texts therefore does not necessarily indicate something uniquely Japanese.Kuroda (1981:7) According to a BBC website, BBC "Shinto" website
"Problems in studying Shinto history" (at the bottom of the "History" webpage), 2011
Kuroda's scholarly writings about Shinto are considered important: :"The scholar Kuroda Toshio has suggested that the traditional view of Shinto as the indigenous religion of Japan stretching back into pre-history is wrong. He argues that Shinto didn't emerge as a separate religion until comparatively modern times, and that this happened for political reasons. The traditional view, he says, is a modern construction of Shinto that has been projected back into history." Such has been his influence that today Japanese specialists, when talking about events antecedent the Japanese Middle Ages, to avoid using the term Shinto have acquired a strong tendency to use instead other terms like .


Kuroda's ''kenmon taisei''

Another major contribution was his theory. Traditional scholarship characterized medieval history as the period of emergence of military governments and new forms of Buddhism (the Kamakura Buddhist schools like Rinzai and Nichiren).Yoshida (2006:381) To the contrary, Kuroda emphasized the continuation of the power of the Kyoto court and of the older schools of Buddhism from the Heian period. He claimed that government was not a prerogative of the warrior cast, but rather a power-sharing arrangement between three blocks (the ), namely the warriors, the aristocrats, and the religious centers of power, with the
Emperor An emperor (from la, imperator, via fro, empereor) is a monarch, and usually the sovereign ruler of an empire or another type of imperial realm. Empress, the female equivalent, may indicate an emperor's wife ( empress consort), mother (emp ...
acting as an arbiter.


''Kenmitsu taisei'' theory

Unlike most scholars at the time, Kuroda believed that the dominant branches of Buddhism during the Japanese Middle Ages (1185 - 1603) were not those of the so-called Kamakura New Buddhism, namely the
Zen Zen ( zh, t=禪, p=Chán; ja, text= 禅, translit=zen; ko, text=선, translit=Seon; vi, text=Thiền) is a school of Mahayana Buddhism that originated in China during the Tang dynasty, known as the Chan School (''Chánzong'' 禪宗), and l ...
, Jōdo and Nichiren schools, but older ones like the Hossō,
Kegon The Huayan or Flower Garland school of Buddhism (, from sa, अवतंसक, Avataṃsaka) is a tradition of Mahayana Buddhist philosophy that first flourished in China during the Tang dynasty (618-907). The Huayan worldview is based pri ...
,
Tendai , also known as the Tendai Lotus School (天台法華宗 ''Tendai hokke shū,'' sometimes just "''hokke shū''") is a Mahāyāna Buddhist tradition (with significant esoteric elements) officially established in Japan in 806 by the Japanese ...
, and
Shingon Shingon monks at Mount Koya is one of the major schools of Buddhism in Japan and one of the few surviving Vajrayana lineages in East Asia, originally spread from India to China through traveling monks such as Vajrabodhi and Amoghavajra. Kn ...
, which he called by the collective name Buddhism because the group included both exoteric and esoteric schools of Japanese Buddhism. Representative of the system were powerful temples like
Kōfuku-ji is a Buddhist temple that was once one of the powerful Seven Great Temples in the city of Nara, Japan. The temple is the national headquarters of the Hossō school. History Kōfuku-ji has its origin as a temple that was established in 669 b ...
, Tōdai-ji, Enryaku-ji, and
Tō-ji , also known as is a Shingon Buddhist temple in the Minami-ku ward of Kyoto, Japan. Founded in 796, it was one of the only three Buddhist temples allowed in the city at the time it became the capital of Japan. As such it has a long history, ...
, whose function was to perform rites for the ruling elites. Because the then-dominant '' honji suijaku'' theological theory, which claimed Japanese '' kami'' were simply local emanations of Indian Buddhist gods, allowed the ''kenmitsu'' schools to incorporate ''kami'' cults into Buddhism, shrines dedicated to them could be included into the ''kenmon taisei'' political and economic system.


Selected works

In a statistical overview derived from writings by and about Toshio Kuroda, OCLC/ WorldCat encompasses roughly 30+ works in 70+ publications in 2 languages and 500+ library holdings. WorldCat Identities黒田俊雄 1926-
/ref> * 蒙古襲来 (1965) * 日本中世封建制論 (1974) * 日本中世の国家と宗教 (1975) * 寺社勢力: もう一つの中世社会 (1980) * 歴史学の再生 : 中世史を組み直す (1983) * 王法と仏法: 中世史の構図 (1983) * 国家と天皇: 天皇制イデオロギ-としての仏教 (1987) * 中世寺院史の研究 (1988) * 日本中世の社会と宗教 (1990) * 日本中世の国家と宗教 (1990)


Notes


References

* * * * Rambelli, Fabio
"Dismantling stereotypes surrounding Japan's sacred entities,"
''Japan Times.'' July 15, 2001; book review excerpted from ''Monumenta Nipponica,'' 56:2. * * {{DEFAULTSORT:Kuroda, Toshio Historians of Japan 1966 births 1993 deaths Place of birth missing 20th-century Japanese historians Kyoto University alumni