The compassionate saviour and lethal temptresses: Kannon and Femme Fatales in setsuwa literature during the Heian period
Kannon, also known as Avalokiteśvara or Kuan-yin, is the bodhisattva of compassion who remains a popular focus of Buddhist veneration in China, Korea, Japan, and Vietnam. Appearing more often than any other deities in medieval Japanese texts, tales of Kannon featured prominently in premodern Japanes...
Main Author: | Liaw, Jia Xuan |
---|---|
Other Authors: | Faizah Binte Zakaria |
Format: | Final Year Project (FYP) |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Nanyang Technological University
2022
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://hdl.handle.net/10356/162473 |
Similar Items
-
The Path of Japanese Setsuwa Prose in Soviet and Russian Japanese Studies
by: D. G. Kiknadze
Published: (2021-12-01) -
Sacralizing the Playful Secular: The Deity of <i>Karuta</i>-Gambling at the Nose Kannon Hall in Sannohe, Aomori
by: Mew Lingjun Jiang
Published: (2024-02-01) -
Asean-Japan industrial co-operation : an overview /
by: Chng, M. K., et al.
Published: (1984) -
What goes bump at night? A survey of Japanese supernatural art in the Edo period
by: Kaur, Audrey Rose
Published: (2022) -
Sinitic Poetry in Early Heian Japan: Kidendō Literacy, Banquet Culture, and the Sugawara House
by: Minguzzi, Dario
Published: (2021-06-01)