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Religion and Sport in Japan

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The sports world’s attention was focused on Japan for the Tokyo 2020 Summer Olympics and Paralympics.

The years-long buildup to and aftermath of the games occurred in the midst of the global pandemic, which delayed the event until 2021.

Given all of this, there is perhaps no better time to delve into an often overlooked but critical facet of sport in Japan—namely religion. Religion has long been a part of the Japanese sport tradition—from Shugendo practitioners offering sumo bouts to the gods to soccer players of all ages praying for success at Shinto shrines; from the use of meditation and ritual in martial arts to gain focus or superhuman abilities to religious organizations sponsoring sporting events and teams and school sports clubs.

Religion and Sport in Japan brings together historians and sport and religious studies specialists from Japan, the US, and Europe to address sport’s ties to corporate and national identity, politics, environmentalism, ritual, and sacred space.

Major themes discussed include the spiritual geographies of sport, sport as invented tradition, technologies of self, material culture, and civil religion.

The chapters are written so that sport historians with no background in the study of Japan or religious studies scholars who have never before examined the world of sport will find the material accessible.

To provide further grounding for non-field specialists, the volume begins with two background chapters that introduce sport studies in Japan and the study of religion and sport.

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£67.50 Save 10.00%
RRP £75.00
Product Details
University of Hawai'i Press
0824897668 / 9780824897666
Hardback
299.56
30/09/2024
United States
277 pages, 7 b&w illustrations
152 x 229 mm