2021/11/09

When Buddhism Became a 'Religion: Religion and Superstition in the Writings of Inoue Enryō. by Jason Ānanda Josephson-Storm | Goodreads

When Buddhism Became a 'Religion: Religion and Superstition in the Writings of Inoue Enryō. by Jason Ānanda Josephson-Storm | Goodreads

When Buddhism Became a 'Religion: Religion and Superstition in the Writings of Inoue Enryō.

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This article examines the process by which Buddhism became a “religion”
in Meiji Japan (1868–1912). As part of the climate of modernization, foreigners,
government officials, and the press increasingly identified Buddhism as
superstitious and backward. In response, Buddhist leaders divided traditional
Buddhist cosmology and practices into the newly constructed categories
“superstition” and “religion.” Superstition was deemed “not really Buddhism”
and purged, while the remainder of Buddhism was made to accord with Westernized
ideas of religion. Buddhist philosopher Inoue Enryō was crucial to
this process. This paper explores “superstition” and “religion” in his writings,
and it discusses the aspects of Buddhism that were invented and sublimated
under the influence of this distinction. This paper argues that not only did
Buddhism became a religion in Meiji Japan but also that in order to do so it
had to eliminate superstitions, which included numerous practices and beliefs
that had previously been central.
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Paperback25 pages
Published 2006 by Journal of Japanese Religious Studies
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Joshua Buhs
Aug 14, 2015rated it liked it
Another in my breaking of Goodreads’s conventions—again with a review of a single essay.

Josephson examines the changes that occurred to Japanese Buddhism when Japan was forcefully opened by American and European colonialists, and underwent its own modernization.

Modernity, modernism, modernization, these are contested terms but, for the case at hand we can go along with a variation on Woolf’s gloss: “On or about December 1910, human character changed.” More clearly, in the nineteenth century, the combined forces of globalization, science and technology, and industrial capitalism forced a re-evaluation of many everyday practices in societies around the world, a reinterpretation that occurred at an unprecedented pace, so that history seemed to speed up.

Josephson points out in the introduction that the Japanese did not have a word for religion equivalent to the American one—a universalizing term that tried to encompass, as James would call them, the “varieties” of experience or get at what the French sociologist Durkheim called the “elementary forms.” As Japanese scholars first thought about it, religion was a subset of Buddhism, the subset that dealt with ethical restrain. Buddhism, though, was not a religion.

This view changed over the second-half of the nineteenth century and the essay is concerned, somewhat with the why and the how, but mostly with the who: Inoue Enryö, the so-called Dr. Monster. He was intent on sorting out Buddhism into two new categories, the supernatural—which was to be discarded in the wake of modern science—and religion—which were beliefs, rather than the past practices, that, in the manner of Western thinking about religion, transcended rationalism—belonged to its own realm of the spiritual (what Geertz would call “the really real.”)

This essay was published in 2006; so it came after Gerald Figal’s interesting “Civilization and Monsters,” which covers some of the same ground, arguing that even though the fantastic and supernatural seem opposed to modernity—Weber had famously had it that the modern world is disenchanted—the fantastic consumed a great deal of thought by the early modernists. Dr. Monster sent years cataloguing the various monsters of Japanese folklore, legend, and myth, some of them from long before, others—as Michael Dylan Foster’s Pandemonium and Parade shows—continuing to be created even in the face of modernity.

The classifying of Buddhism as a religion depended upon understanding of religion that was rooted in Christianity (which is how you get what are later called Protestant Buddhists, also not referenced here.) One wonders if it is the comparison to Christianity or something else that made definitions of Japanese Buddhism hew closely to reformations of Christianity in the 19th century. In particular, Josephson notes that there ‘supernatural’ tended to include all the devils and demons and evil-doers—just as American Christianity, in particular, was purged of these same elements in the 19th century. (Victoria Nelson, in her two books “The Secret Life foe Puppets” and “Gothika” argues that these less wholesome religious impulses were redirected into popular culture, particularly gothic writing; is it possible to make a similar case for Japanese popular culture?).

Inoue sharply divided the material from the spiritual, in the process dismissing belief in miracles and luck. Science was given pride of place as an interpreter of the material world. as a result, Buddhist cosmology was dismantled, with references to the working of the world were reinterpreted metaphorically or ignored. Increasingly, Buddhism was internalized—psychologized. The emphasis was no longer on ritual and practice but belief in an absolute—the realm that exists beyond reason.

The changes here were happening in a peculiarly Japanese context—there are many modernities, not just one. In particular, Buddhism had been under siege by political elites just prior to the Meiji period and this reformation of Buddhism was a response to those local conditions. Nonetheless, parallels can be drawn, and there seems to be a similarity to this process and the one that John Lardas Modern documents in antebellum America. (NB: I have yet to read Modern—I know!—himself, only about him.) He argued that secularism was a religious movement of sorts, a religious adaptation to new cultural conditions. The transformation of Buddhism into a religion seems to be doing some of the same cultural work.

The essay is not without its faults. It makes a lot of claims about the changes Buddhism underwent without providing many specific examples. There is no reference to Figal’s work and some other key work on the subject. There’s a needlessly long tangent on the theoretical substructure of the article. Nor does he consider how much effective Dr. Monster was in his attempts—how much his ideas changed Buddhism on the ground, in the everyday life of everyday citizens. And there’s not much consideration of feedback loops, as opposed to one way transfers: that Buddhism was influenced by colonizing powers, but not how it affected those colonizing powers in turn.

Perhaps that would be just too much. But it’ a rich story, investigated well by David L. McMahan, who shows that Buddhism’s transformation was more complex than Josephson allows. Buddhism can be seen, in Romantic terms, as opposed to science, speaking toward a realm of experience beyond the reach of reason. But Buddhism has also ben taken up as the scientific religion, mindfulness practice given the stamp of approval of psychologists; Buddhisms attendance to the everyday is seen as pragmatic and scientific, fitting with a secular American culture. But even here McMahan—possibly overstating the case some—argues that Buddhism has been cut off from its roots, mindfulness and associated practices turned into tools for self-actualization and the improvement of individual Western lives, minimizing social relationships and community—another in a long list of practices, then, that have come to isolate the American individual further and further.

Nothing is permanent, the Buddha says, and that goes for Buddhism, too.


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Moreau
Dec 14, 2015rated it it was amazing
An excellent intervention into contemporary debates about Buddhism and the category religion. I teach it in most of my courses on Japanese Buddhism.

The Myth of Disenchantment: Magic, Modernity, and the Birth of the Human Sciences: Storm, Jason Ananda Josephson: 9780226403366: Amazon.com: Books

The Myth of Disenchantment: Magic, Modernity, and the Birth of the Human Sciences: Storm, Jason Ananda Josephson: 9780226403366: Amazon.com: Books




The Myth of Disenchantment: Magic, Modernity, and the Birth of the Human Sciences Paperback – May 16, 2017
by Jason Ananda Josephson Storm  (Author)
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A great many theorists have argued that the defining feature of modernity is that people no longer believe in spirits, myths, or magic. Jason Ā. Josephson-Storm argues that as broad cultural history goes, this narrative is wrong, as attempts to suppress magic have failed more often than they have succeeded. Even the human sciences have been more enchanted than is commonly supposed. But that raises the question: How did a magical, spiritualist, mesmerized Europe ever convince itself that it was disenchanted?

Josephson-Storm traces the history of the myth of disenchantment in the births of philosophy, anthropology, sociology, folklore, psychoanalysis, and religious studies. Ironically, the myth of mythless modernity formed at the very time that Britain, France, and Germany were in the midst of occult and spiritualist revivals. Indeed, Josephson-Storm argues, these disciplines' founding figures were not only aware of, but profoundly enmeshed in, the occult milieu; and it was specifically in response to this burgeoning culture of spirits and magic that they produced notions of a disenchanted world.  

By providing a novel history of the human sciences and their connection to esotericism, The Myth of Disenchantment dispatches with most widely held accounts of modernity and its break from the premodern past.
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Print length
400 pages
Language
English
Publisher
University of Chicago Press
Publication date
May 16, 2017
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"The implications of this book are vast and potentially revolutionary for the humanities. Josephson-Storm's mastery over the history of western philosophy, his sharp eye for the magical lives of the intellectuals, and his expertise in Japanese religion render his voice uniquely multidimensional, utterly original, and eerily persuasive. I am deeply excited about The Myth of Disenchantment and what it portends for both our academic fields and our human futures."
-Jeffrey J. Kripal, author of Authors of the Impossible: The Paranormal and the Sacred


"I know of no other study that offers such an ambitious reassessment of the genealogy of the notion of disenchantment. Building on impressive historical research, Josephson-Storm offers innovative readings of foundational social scientific and theoretical texts. This book is a major addition to the critical literature exploring the origins and nature of modernity."
-Randall Styers, author of Making Magic: Religion, Magic, and Science in the Modern World


"The Myth of Disenchantment is a work of considerable clarity and directness. . .notable for its lucidity. . . . The Myth of Disenchantment is essential reading for those interested in the history of the modern humanities. It is directly engaged in this emerging field, investigating the figures and practices that constitute the history of the study of religion, critical theory, and other 'human sciences.' It features insightful syntheses of previous work, as well as original research into both obscure and well-worn areas of inquiry. . . offers a strong basis for future work."
-History of Humanities

"The author displays impressive erudition in tackling what is, by any standards, a massive undertaking. . . Josephson-Storm exhaustively traces the development of Western thought on this subject through history to the present time, and convincingly argues that the magic never really went away after all. . . .While the underlying theme is eminently simple and understandable, some of the philosophical arguments become immensely complex. This book is a serious academic work. . .yet he reveals a capacity for lightness of touch. . . The Myth of Disenchantment is a most stimulating and informative book."
-Magonia Review of Books

"This is a significant book. The Myth of Disenchantment is ambitious and well written, horizon broadening and provocative. . . . It forces the sociologist to reconsider whether secularization and disenchantment are necessarily causally linked, and it vexes the science of religion's self-understanding as a disciplinary tradition with a safe distance from the object it interprets and explains. In other words, the book is definitely recommended for critical reading."
-Jørn Borup, Religionsvidenskabeligt Tidsskrift
 "The Myth of Disenchantment is a model monograph: a work that condenses a dizzying array of information into a tightly woven and significant argument and then relays it in easily understandable and enjoyable prose. Its impact on the field at large is sure to be felt."
-Journal of the American Academy of Religion
From the Author
I think of a book as opening a dialogue with readers.  In this respect, I want to be more open to email contact and conversation than is typical for academic authors. I'm always happy to discuss issues the book evokes, answer questions, or provide clarifications. You can email me via contact information on my academic website at Williams College or contact me on my blog (google Absolute-Disruption or find the link on my Amazon Author Page). I may not reply immediately, but I will respond. 
More about The Myth of Disenchantment can be found on my blog, which also includes errata and additional content (eventually including interviews with me about the book). 
For faculty members teaching the book, I'm also potentially available to Skype into your class. For this contact me through my college email. 
About the Author
Jason Ānanda Josephson-Storm is Chair & Associate professor of the Department of Religion at Williams College. He received his PhD from Stanford University in 2006, his MTS from Harvard University in 2001, and has held visiting positions at Princeton University, École Française d'Extrême-Orient, Paris and Ruhr Universität, Germany. He is also the author of The Invention of Religion in Japan (University of Chicago Press 2012, winner of the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion- Distinguished Book of the Year Award-2013), and The Myth of Disenchantment: Magic, Modernity and the Birth of the Human Sciences (University of Chicago Press, 2017).
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Jason Ananda Josephson Storm
Jason Ānanda Josephson Storm is Professor of Religion and Chair of Science & Technology Studies at Williams College. He received his PhD from Stanford University, his MTS from Harvard University, and has held visiting positions at Princeton University, École Française d'Extrême-Orient, Paris, Ruhr Universität and Universität Leipzig, Germany. He is the author of "The Invention of Religion in Japan" (University of Chicago Press 2012, winner of the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion- Distinguished Book of the Year Award) and "The Myth of Disenchantment: Magic, Modernity and the Birth of the Human Sciences" (2017).

4.8 out of 5 stars
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Top reviews from the United States
JS
5.0 out of 5 stars A book of magic
Reviewed in the United States on June 3, 2017
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After Josephson-Storm's bombshell "The Invention of Religion in Japan," a conscious attempt to build a counter-mythology which invited much interest and criticism, his new book "The Myth of Disenchantment" was highly anticipated in some academic circles. People who jumped to pre-order their copy may be disappointed at first if they have an Aristotelian bent. A lot of it seems like “ad hominem” characterizations of individual thinkers rather than discussing the “essence” of their intellectual program.

I recommend to such a reader a little thought experiment. Close the book, and try to write a paragraph-long history of thought where you explain how it is that academia lost its Christian character in the 19th century and became ruled by secular or atheist forces instead. “As Weber explained, the modern world is a disenchanted one.” But hold on… you just read a book where Josephson-Storm explained in painstaking detail how Weber was fond of mysticism and occultism!

This is the “myth” that he is trying to demonstrate: academics like to mourn how sad it is that the modern world has become past-perfect “disenchanted,” while simultaneously participating in enchanted behaviors that exist very much in their own present day. So even if you yourself sincerely believe in the superiority of positivism, this book will rid you of mythical historicist grounds for your argument: you must return to arguing for positivism on its own merits and not because the current year demands such a thing.

The real conundrum is if you *don’t* believe in positivism, like many of the writers Josephson-Storm discusses. Many humanities scholars use the myth of disenchantment not to cheerlead for atheism, but to apologize for their own commitment to methodological naturalism by appealing to a popular fairy tale (specifically, the tale of the vanishing of the fairies). This book may seem slight in its argument at first, but in fact, having read it closely, it will have a reflective force on your own work: you are no longer able to appeal to “disenchantment” in an honest way.

It is a magic book!
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The Greatest Weight
5.0 out of 5 stars Myths and their consequences
Reviewed in the United States on February 21, 2021
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Josephson-Storm analyzes the received notion that modernity is qualified by its being representative of a number of bundled processes- rationalization, industrialization, capitalism, dedivinized nature, and the suppression or rejection of magical or occult practices, etc.- and signifying a definitive rupture with the past and the establishment of a new cultural epoch. This is in large part a myth, though one which has exerted its pressures on various areas of culture, especially the human sciences. The myth of disenchantment, as a sub-species of this myth of modernity, is the focus of this work, which is dismantled through the close examination of the various individuals who are credited with its establishment, who are revealed to be themselves heavily involved in the occult, the paranormal and the magical. This includes scientists such as Bacon and Newton, architects of the disenchantment thesis such as Muller, Frazer, Tylor and Weber, philosophers like Kant, Hegel, and Freud, and the logical positivists (Carnap, Hahn) and their sparring partners the Frankfurt school. Their involvement in such magical currents also reveals the social context in which much of their work occurred, which was filled with occult revivals and magical practices, as evidenced by the central figure of vitalist philosopher (lebensphilosophie) Ludwig Klages and the cosmic circle in fin de siecle Munich, whose wide influence shows up throughout the latter half of the book. The myth of disenchantment thus problematized, Josephson-Storm makes the case that it has functioned more as a disenchanting process than a completed state, and that it really exhibits a schizophrenic character of transforming itself into its opposite (such as disenchantment revealing higher level magical return) or of simultaneously disenchanting and reenchanting. The rupture with the past appears to be quite suspect, but the myth still persists in many disciplines and much popular consciousness, “haunting” the present.

Many such spectres appear in the book, from Kant’s ding an sich (a noumenal transcendent realm that philosophers proceeded to populate with esoteric forms) haunting German idealism to Klages as a “Frankenstein monster” whose work contains (and has inspired) an astonishing diversity of ideas prominent in continental philosophy and critical theory. The monster was a myth, but Klages was the reality. Klages would likely be pleased to hear Josephson-Storm making the case for his outsized influence on critical theory and elsewhere, as he often referred to himself as the most pilfered thinker in philosophy. The recent work of Paul Bishop on Klages (A Vitalist Toolkit) which came out after this work, would have been another useful addition to the account given here of Klages.

All in all, Josephson-Storm has done an admirable job in critiquing and exposing the still prevalent myth of disenchantment. Near the end of the book he declares “we are already free” because the myth was never totally established or even accurate in the context of its own genesis. However, we are certainly not free of the effects of many behaving as if this myth were fact; in the reticence of scholars to disclose the presence of the magical or mystical in their work and lives (Josephson-Storms own grandmother, an anthropologist, waited until after retirement to publicly disclose her own belief in spirits); and in the practices of extractive industry that treats the world as (in Klages terminology) mere things rather than composed of living souls (or interdependent ecosystems), to say nothing of Weber’s “iron cage.” If there is a hopeful note that emerges from this critique, it is that we are not so beset by this myth as we might have assumed, that its hold over us was only ever partial and incomplete, and that if history is any guide, it likely contains the seeds of its own reversal in subsequent magical retrieval and renewal “in a higher key.”
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Jeremy Bellay
5.0 out of 5 stars Disenchanting disenchantment
Reviewed in the United States on November 15, 2017
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This is the second book by Josephson-Storm after, “The Invention of Religion in Japan”, which I also read and greatly enjoyed. Though the subject matter is very different, Josephson-Storm again supports his arguments with detailed, well told, historical narrative. He characterizes the interactions of key historical thinkers with enchantment/disenchantment, and we are treated to a Frazer who sees magic as aligned with science against populist religion, and Max Weber who’s sympathies don’t align with his famous “disenchantment of the world.” Unlike many academic works, the book is engaging from beginning to end. This is good because the book has a rather strange story to tell of how enchantment and disenchantment have been recruited again and again through the last few centuries (though the focus is the first half of the 20th century) to ennoble and discredit. Like the tension between localism and transnationalism, enchanted and disenchantment seem to engender one another. Intuitively, the work is extremely timely as disenchantment/enchantment are strikingly (and seemingly paradoxically) apparent in our national political discussion and it's unfortunate the book was finished before the surprising result of the last election.
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Kindle Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars scholarly perfect. One of the best book I have read ...
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on October 22, 2017
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Refreshing, intellectually stimulating, scholarly perfect. One of the best book I have read this year!
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Jason Newcomb
3.0 out of 5 stars Halfway through, I realize I am the wrong audience for this
Reviewed in Canada on August 13, 2020
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The book’s audience seems to be other scholars within the field. As such it comes across as self referential to a dumb like me who just wanted to see how the world is actually enchanted (or perceived as such) despite a prevailing notion that we live in a secular age.

The language seemed to me to be quite jargony and the points of discussion includes a lot of inside baseball talk.

The foreword was barely intelligible to my ear but I was heartened at the first chapter which was argued with a lot more clarity. But by the time I reached the section on “philosophes” I found myself skimming or skipping large chunks of the text and I’ve kept up this reading method until the Crowley/Frazer sections. Surprisingly this has so far made the book a much more enjoyable read and the argumentation seemed clearer.

The title and sleeve design as well as the back cover blurbs and description seemed marketed to me. My natural interests seem to make me taylor made for this book. But in reading it I felt the writing style to be alienating.
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Jason Josephson Storm - Wikipedia

Jason Josephson Storm - Wikipedia

Jason Josephson Storm

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Jason Ānanda Josephson Storm
Born
Jason Ānanda Josephson
NationalityAmerican
Other names
  • Jason Storm
  • Jason Josephson-Storm
RelativesFelicitas Goodman (grandmother)[1]: 302–304 
AwardsDistinguished Book Award, Society for the Scientific Study of Religion, 2013[2]
Academic background
EducationMTSHarvard Divinity SchoolPhD Stanford University
Alma materStanford University
ThesisTaming Demons: The Anti-Superstition Campaign and the Invention of Religion in Japan (1853-1920) (2006)
Academic advisors
Academic work
Discipline
Sub-discipline
School or tradition
Notable works
Notable ideas
WebsiteFaculty profile

Jason Ānanda Josephson Storm ( Josephson) is an American academic, philosopher, social scientist, and author. He is currently Professor and Chair in the Department of Religion and Chair in Science and Technology Studies at Williams College.[4] He also holds affiliated positions in Asian studies and Comparative Literature at Williams College. Storm's research focuses on Japanese religions, European intellectual history from 1600 to the present, and theory in religious studies.[4] His more recent work has discussed 

disenchantment and philosophy of social science.

Storm has written three books and over a dozen academic essays in English.[4] He has also published articles in French and Japanese, and translated academic essays and primary sources from Japanese to English. His first book, The Invention of Religion in Japan, earned the 2013 "Distinguished Book Award" from the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion and was a finalist for the American Academy of Religion's "Best First Book" award in the History of Religions.[2][4] Benjamin G. Robinson, a scholar of religion and race, has described Storm's work as "seminal."[5]

Education[edit]

Storm earned a Master of Theological Studies degree from Harvard Divinity School in 2001. He earned a PhD in Religious Studies from Stanford University in 2006, where he studied Japanese religions under Bernard Faure, Carl Bielefeldt, and Helen Hardacre. During this time, he also researched Continental philosophy, especially post-structuralism. He was a visiting student at St Antony's College, Oxford in the 2004 academic year.[4] Storm's doctoral dissertation was entitled Taming Demons: The Anti-Superstition Campaign and the Invention of Religion in Japan (1853-1920).

Research[edit]

Japanese religions[edit]

Much of Storm's early writing on Japanese religions built on his doctoral research. This writing particularly examined how the categories of religionsuperstition, and science came to be constructed in Meiji-era Japan. For example, the paper "When Buddhism became a 'Religion'," one of Storm's most cited papers according to Google Scholar,[6] examined the categorization of different aspects of traditional Japanese Buddhism as religion and superstition in the work of Inoue Enryō.[7]

In his 2012 book The Invention of Religion in Japan, Storm expanded this argument to examine how Japanese thinkers in the Meiji era adopted Western categories of religion, superstition, and science. Storm examined the origins of State Shinto in this light.[8]: 133  The book also examined the confluence of Japanese religious thought, political theory, science, and philology in movements such as the Kokugaku.[8]: 110–111 

Kevin Schilbrack has associated The Invention of Religion in Japan with "Critical Religion" or the "critical study of religion", an approach in religious studies that challenges the stability of religion as an analytical category.[3]: 93–94  Other thinkers in this movement include Talal Asad and Russell T. McCutcheon. Within this field, The Invention of Religion in Japan draws on insights from postcolonial theory and has been connected to Edward Said's Orientalism and Richard King's Orientalism and Religion.[9]: 82  At the same time, Storm complicates Said's thesis, noting in particular that Japanese scholars adapted the concept of religion to their own ends and contributed to orientalist scholarship in order to position Japan as a culturally and intellectually dominant force in East Asia, including over Korea during Japan's colonization of the region.[9][8]: 247 

In his book introducing different concepts of religion, Benjamin Schewel claimed that Storm's work in The Invention of Religion in Japan made "major conceptual contributions" to what Schewel terms the "Construct Narrative" of the definition of religion.[10]

Other ideas developed in The Invention of Religion in Japan have been applied more broadly in religious studies. For instance, the ideas of hierarchical inclusion and exclusive similarity, which Storm coined to describe Japanese methods of conceiving religious difference,[8]: 24–39  have been applied in research on South Asian religions.[11]

Magic and disenchantment[edit]

Storm's 2017 book The Myth of Disenchantment challenged the validity of the thesis of disenchantment in the social sciences. The book argues that social-scientific data do not support the idea of a widespread loss of belief in magic in the West.[1]: ch. 1  The book distinguishes between secularization and disenchantment as theoretical and sociological phenomena and argues that they have not been correlated in European history. According to Storm, these data challenge traditional definitions of modernity.[1]: 306–310  Storm argues that disenchantment has come to serve as a myth in the sense of a "regulative ideal" that impacts human behavior and leads people to act as though disenchantment has occurred, even though it has not.[12]

In addition to its sociological critique of the reality of disenchantment, The Myth of Disenchantment offered new intellectual-historical interpretations of sociological theorists commonly associated with disenchantment. The book argued that many of these thinkers, including Max WeberJames George Frazer, and Sigmund Freud, engaged with mysticism and the occult.[1] For this reason, Storm argues, accounts of disenchantment derived from the work of these figures may need to be revised. In The Myth of Disenchantment and other academic articles, Storm also argued for a close connection between Western esotericism and the origin of religious studies as a discipline.[13][1]: ch. 4 

Around the time of The Myth of Disenchantment's publication, Storm discussed the thesis and main arguments of the book in semi-popular articles for aeon.co and The Immanent Frame as well as through interviews with magazines and podcasts.[14][15][12]

Theory[edit]

Storm has written on broader questions of epistemology and theory in religious studies. Some of his work in this field seeks to extend and generalize concepts developed in The Invention of Religion in Japan.

Building on ideas in his 2012 book, Storm has developed a trinaristic approach to examining the relationship between secularism, superstition, and religion that he argues is applicable more generally.[16] This trinary contrasts to earlier social-scientific accounts of secularization, which tend to presuppose a binary between religion and secularism. According to Storm, the trinaristic formulation may allow for a more refined theorization of secularism, secularization, and modernity. Brill's Method & Theory in the Study of Religion devoted an issue to further discussing and applying Storm's idea in other subfields of religious studies.[17]

Storm has also been a proponent of what he calls "Reflexive Religious Studies," inspired by the "reflexive sociology" of Pierre Bourdieu and Loïc Wacquant, which describes sociology itself in sociological terms. Reflexive Religious Studies addresses the way that "that academic social science produces feedback in culture in such a way that it produces greater coherence in the social sphere that it then studies."[18] More specifically Reflexive Religious Studies "examine[s] those societies in which the category “religion” and its entangled differentiations (e.g., the distinction between religion and the secular) have begun to function as concepts" and it describes how the academic study of religion "actually reverberates in the religious field, revitalizing and even producing religions."[18]

In a 2020 article for Method & Theory in the Study of Religion, Storm applied analytic philosophy of science to critique attempts to model the methods of religious studies on the natural sciences.[19] There Storm also discussed his plans to develop a new approach to the social sciences that he terms metamodernism.[19]

Reception[edit]

The Myth of Disenchantment has been favorably reviewed in several academic publications, including Magic, Ritual, and Witchcraft,[20] Fides et Historia,[21] and the Journal of the American Academy of Religion.[22]

Writing in History of ReligionsHugh Urban called The Myth of Disenchantment "a powerful book that forces us to rethink many of our basic assumptions in the modern history of ideas", although he argued that Storm could have more closely examined the relationship between modern enchantment and capitalism.[23]

The Invention of Religion in Japan was a finalist best first book in the History of Religion at the American Academy of Religion and it won a distinguished book of the year award from the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion.[24] It has also been favorably reviewed in Numen,[25] the Journal of Japanese Studies,[26] Religious Studies Review,[27] and the Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion,[28] among other academic publications.

A 2019 doctoral dissertation has engaged extensively with the arguments in The Myth of Disenchantment, recognizing their significance but seeking to more deeply examine the connection between enchantment and European colonialism.[29] Matthew Melvin-Koushki, a scholar of Islam and Islamic occultism, has also cited The Myth of Disenchantment to challenge orientalizing accounts of magic in the Islamic world.[30]: 238–239 

The 2017 annual AAR-SBL meeting in Boston included an "Author Meets Critics" panel devoted to The Myth of Disenchantment.[31]

Bibliography[edit]

Books[edit]

Select journal articles in English[edit]

References[edit]

  1. Jump up to:a b c d e Josephson Storm, Jason (2017). The Myth of Disenchantment: Magic, Modernity, and the Birth of the Human Sciences. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-40336-6.
  2. Jump up to:a b "Distinguished Book Award"Society for the Scientific Study of Religion. Retrieved 9 November 2021.
  3. Jump up to:a b Schilbrack, Kevin (January 14, 2020). "A metaphysics for the study of religion: A critical reading of Russell McCutcheon"Critical Research on Religion8 (1): 87–100. doi:10.1177/2050303219900229. Retrieved 9 November 2021.
  4. Jump up to:a b c d e f g h "Jason Josephson Storm"williams.edu. Retrieved 9 November 2021.
  5. ^ Robinson, Benjamin (May 27, 2019). "Racialization and modern religion: Sylvia Wynter, black feminist theory, and critical genealogies of religion"Critical Research on Religion7 (3): 257–274. doi:10.1177/2050303219848065S2CID 189964035. Retrieved 9 November 2021.
  6. ^ "Jason Josephson Storm"Google Scholar. 2021. Retrieved 9 November 2021.
  7. ^ Josephson, Jason Ānanda (2006). "When Buddhism Became a "Religion": Religion and Superstition in the Writings of Inoue Enryō"Japanese Journal of Religious Studies33 (1): 143–168. JSTOR 30233795. Retrieved 9 November 2021.
  8. Jump up to:a b c d Josephson, Jason Ānanda (2012). The Invention of Religion in Japan. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0226412344.
  9. Jump up to:a b Goldstein, Warren (April 4, 2020). "What makes Critical Religion critical? A response to Russell McCutcheon"Critical Research on Religion8 (1): 73–86. doi:10.1177/2050303220911149. Retrieved 9 November 2021.
  10. ^ Schewel, Benjamin (September 26, 2017). 7 Ways of Looking at Religion: The Major Narratives. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300231410.
  11. ^ Berkwitz, Stephen C. (January 17, 2017). "Sinhala Buddhist Appropriations of Indic Cultural Forms: Literary Imitations and Conquests"Religions of South Asia10 (1): 31–53. doi:10.1558/rosa.27959. Retrieved 9 November 2021.
  12. Jump up to:a b Gyrus (February 2018). "Myth & Disenchantment: An interview with Jason Ā. Josephson-Storm"Dreamflesh. Retrieved 9 November 2021.
  13. ^ Josephson, Jason Ānanda (2013). "God's Shadow: Occluded Possibilities in the Genealogy of "Religion""History of Religions52 (4): 309–339. doi:10.1086/669644S2CID 170485577. Retrieved 9 November 2021.
  14. ^ Josephson Storm, Jason (June 25, 2019). "Against Disenchantment"aeon. Retrieved 9 November 2021.
  15. ^ Josephson Storm, Jason (May 23, 2017). "The Myth of Disenchantment: An Introduction"The Immanent Frame. SSRC. Retrieved 9 November2021.
  16. ^ Josephson Storm, Jason Ānanda (January 2, 2018). "The Superstition, Secularism, and Religion Trinary: Or Re-Theorizing Secularism"Method & Theory in the Study of Religion30 (1): 1–20. doi:10.1163/15700682-12341409. Retrieved 9 November 2021.
  17. ^ "Method & Theory in the Study of Religion, volume 30, issue 1"Brill Publishers. January 2, 2018. Retrieved 9 November 2021.
  18. Jump up to:a b Josephson-Storm, Jason (2017). The Myth of Disenchantment: Magic, Modernity, and the Birth of the Human Sciences. University of Chicago Press. pp. 11–14. ISBN 97802264032299780226403533.
  19. Jump up to:a b Josephson Storm, Jason Ânanda (28 July 2020). "Revolutionizing the Human Sciences: A Response to Wiebe"Method & Theory in the Study of Religion33: 82–88. doi:10.1163/15700682-12341498. Retrieved 9 November 2021.
  20. ^ Bindell, S.M. Mendell (Spring 2018). "The Myth of Disenchantment: Magic, Modernity, and the Birth of the Human Sciences by Jason Ā. Josephson-Storm (review)"Magic, Ritual, and Witchcraft13 (1): 120–125. doi:10.1353/mrw.2018.0004. Retrieved 9 November 2021.
  21. ^ Larsen, Timothy (Fall 2019). "Featured Review:The Myth of Disenchantment: Magic, Modernity, and the Birth of the Human Sciences". Fides et Historia51 (2): 168–170.
  22. ^ Heyes, Michael E. (July 27, 2018). "The Myth of Disenchantment: Magic, Modernity, and the Birth of the Human Sciences. By Jason A. Josephson-Storm"Journal of the American Academy of Religion86 (4): 1158–1161. doi:10.1093/jaarel/lfy035. Retrieved 9 November 2021.
  23. ^ Urban, Hugh. "Review of The Myth of Disenchantment: Magic, Modernity, and the Birth of the Human Sciences. By Jason Ā. Josephson-Storm"History of Religions59 (1): 78–9. doi:10.1086/703523. Retrieved 9 November 2021.
  24. ^ "List of Distinguished Book Awards, Scientific Study of Religion".
  25. ^ MacWilliams, Mark W. (June 8, 2015). "The Invention of Religion in Japan, written by Jason Ānanda Josephson"Numen62 (4): 468–473. doi:10.1163/15685276-12341383. Retrieved 9 November 2021.
  26. ^ Dobbins, James C. (Summer 2014). "Review of The Invention of Religion in Japan by Jason Ānanda Josephson"The Journal of Japanese Studies40 (2): 478–483. doi:10.1353/jjs.2014.0092JSTOR 24242739S2CID 141043276. Retrieved 9 November 2021.
  27. ^ Kawamura, Satofumi (December 2016). "The Politics of Studying Religion in Modern Japan—Review of The Invention of Religion in Japan"Religious Studies Review42 (4): 255–258. doi:10.1111/rsr.12640. Retrieved 9 November 2021.
  28. ^ Roemer, MK (December 4, 2013). "Book Reviews: The Invention of Religion in Japan"Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion52 (4): 852–853. doi:10.1111/jssr.12070. Retrieved 9 November 2021.
  29. ^ Becker, Martin Stephan (2019). The Disenchantment of the World and Ontological Wonder (PhD). UC Santa Barbara.
  30. ^ Melvin-Koushki, Matthew (April 23, 2018). "Taḥqīq vs. Taqlīd in the Renaissances of Western Early Modernity"Philological Encounters3(1–2): 193–249. doi:10.1163/24519197-12340041. Retrieved 9 November2021.
  31. ^ "Boston Annual Meeting, November 18-21 2017" (PDF)sbl-site.org. Society of Biblical Literature. 2017. Retrieved 9 November 2021.

External links[edit]