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Sôtô Zenshû no Brasil : a crioulização de práticas cotidianas

Translated title of the contribution: Soto Zenshu in Brazil : the crioulization of daily practices

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Abstract

Sôtô Zenshû was the first Japanese Buddhist school in Brazil that attracted members from outside the nipo-Brazilian community. At the same time several immigrants converted to Catholicism, some even before leaving Japan. More recently, Buddhism in general and Zen in particular witnessed resurgence due to the growing popularity of New-Age-spirituality. Arguing that the related religious field has promoted mechanisms of “creolization” the article is interested in the ways through which Japanese immigrants have incorporated a Brazilian religious “vocabulary” into their “Buddhist” grammar while Buddhist converts without a Japanese ethnical background refer to syntaxes associated with Catholicism or New-Age-Spirituality.
Translated title of the contributionSoto Zenshu in Brazil : the crioulization of daily practices
Original languagePortuguese (Brazil)
Pages (from-to)87-100
Number of pages14
JournalRevista de Estudos da Religião (REVER)
Volume11
Issue number2
Publication statusPublished - 2011

Notes

WIP AS TBA
Peer review statement on website https://revistas.pucsp.br/index.php/rever/about

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