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Shinto

Coin Transaction Fees

A few weeks ago, I mentioned that most banks in Japan had introduced significant transaction fees for the deposit of coins, and that this was likely to have an impact on jinja. This issue was clearly of concern to the people at Jinja Shinpō, because when they sent out the hatsumōdë survey that I discussed last week, they also included a question about this problem. They got a wide range of responses. (Incidentally, a couple of weeks ago, a few days after the results were published, NHK did a short… Read More »Coin Transaction Fees

Jinja Etiquette Videos

Last year, Tokyo Jinjachō made two videos demonstrating the etiquette for visiting a jinja and put them online. They are both less than three minutes long, and were filmed at jinja in Tokyo. The first is about how to purify yourself, both when there is a ladle, and when there isn’t. The second is about the etiquette of paying your respects, both with and without a bell rope. The Japanese subtitles on both videos mainly give descriptions of what is being done, rather than additional explanation, with an encouragement to… Read More »Jinja Etiquette Videos

Hatsumōdë Survey 2022

This year, Jinja Shinpō carried out a survey of its local correspondents to ask about the state of hatsumōdë, and reported the results in the 14 February issue. They did this last year as well, to find out how the pandemic was affecting smaller jinja. The particular questions this year were about whether numbers of visitors had increased, decreased, or stayed the same since last year, and since the year before last (which was before the pandemic had made it to Japan). In addition, there was a space for the… Read More »Hatsumōdë Survey 2022

Bloomsbury Shinto Studies

Bloomsbury Shinto Studies is a series of books, in English, about Shinto, published by Bloomsbury (and thus probably subsidised by the profits from Harry Potter). The series is still active, and although the initial hardcover publications are very expensive, the paperback versions are more reasonable. You can also get ebooks direct from Bloomsbury, although I am sure that they are available on Amazon as well. These are serious academic books, and thus rather heavier going than most of the things I write for Mimusubi, but they are all interesting, and… Read More »Bloomsbury Shinto Studies

Origins and Etymology of Sacred Forests

This blog post covers two articles about sacred forests from Jinja Shinpō, because these two drifted a bit from the core topic in talking about the history and etymology of sacred forests. The article in the January 31st issue was mainly about sacred forests in other cultures; they were found in ancient Egypt, and in India, and in China from the fifth or sixth century. It did talk briefly about Japan. There are remains of structures from the mid-Yayoi period onwards (from around 100 BCE) that appear to be ritual… Read More »Origins and Etymology of Sacred Forests

An Introduction to Shinto in Paperback

My book, An Introduction to Shinto, is now available in print from Amazon (affiliate link!). It is available from all the local Amazons, although the affiliate link is to the US store, because that is where most of my sales happen. The content is the same as the Kindle version, except that I have added QR Codes for the links, and the paperback is printed in black and white, so the illustrations and photographs are also in black and white. This is not ideal, especially for the illustrations of priestly… Read More »An Introduction to Shinto in Paperback