
THE INVENTION OF A NEW RELIGION
By B. H. Chamberlain
EMERITUS PROFESSOR OF JAPANESE AND PHILOLOGY AT THE IMPERIAL UNIVERSITY OF TOKYO, JAPAN 1912
THE INVENTION OF A NEW RELIGION (1)
In this thought‑provoking essay the author turns a critical eye toward the way modern Japan has fashioned a new kind of religion—one built on loyalty to the emperor and patriotic devotion rather than traditional faith. By juxtaposing the claims of eighteenth‑century philosophers with contemporary Japanese attitudes, he asks whether what looks like irreligion may actually conceal a deliberately crafted belief system. The opening pages set the stage with vivid descriptions of how the Japanese bureaucracy, likened to an ancient priesthood, began to reshape cultural symbols for state purposes.
The work traces how the old Shinto cult, once dismissed as a primitive nature worship, was revived and re‑engineered to support a national ideology that stresses the emperor’s divine lineage. It shows the tension between eager adoption of Western ideas after 1888 and a sudden turn toward a revived, state‑sanctioned reverence for the throne. Readers are invited to follow the early arguments about how this emerging “religion of loyalty” was consciously assembled, revealing the complex dance between tradition, modernity, and political ambition.
Language
en
Duration
~31 minutes (30K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Peter Evans, and David Widger
Release date
2001-02-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1850–1935
A pioneering British scholar of Japan, he helped introduce Japanese language, literature, and folklore to English-speaking readers in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. His books combine careful scholarship with a lively curiosity about everyday life in Japan.
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