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Informationen zum Autor Tomoko Iwasawa is associate professor of comparative religions at Reitaku University, Japan. She received her M.A. and Ph.D. in philosophy of religion from Boston University. Her publications include Jaspers' "Schuldfrage" and Hiroshima: Does the Concept of Guilt Exist for Japanese Religious Consciousness? (2008) and On the Concept of Defilement: A Comparative Study of Paul Ricoeur's "Symbolism of Evil" and Japanese Myth (2009). She is an executive board member of International Shinto Foundation. Klappentext This book attempts to elucidate Japanese religious experiences by presenting an innovative interpretation of the oldest existing text of Japanese myth, the Kojiki. Iwasawa offers new insights into Japanese mythology regarding the relationship between the human and the divine. Zusammenfassung This book attempts to elucidate Japanese religious experiences by presenting an innovative interpretation of the oldest existing text of Japanese myth! the Kojiki. Iwasawa offers new insights into Japanese mythology regarding the relationship between the human and the divine. Inhaltsverzeichnis AcknowledgmentsIntroductionPART I TAMA IN JAPANESE MYTH - HISTORICAL INVESTIGATIONSChapter 1 In Pursuit of Tama in the Japanese Language: Motoori Norinaga's Interpretation of Tama Chapter 2 In Search of the Salvation of Embodied Tama: Hirata Atsutane's Interpretation of TamaChapter 3 The Dialectic of Mythologizing, Demythologizing, and RemythologizingPART II TAMA IN JAPANESE MYTH - CONCRETE MANIFESTATIONSPart II Introduction Chapter 4 The Problem of Defilement: The Myth of Izanagi and IzanamiChapter 5 The Problem of Sin: The Myth of Amaterasu and SusanowoConclusionBibliographyIndex