As public documents, these sources tend to mirror the normative discourse on women's roles in Japan at large, but they also hint at the untold story of the bomoris religious authority. These documents proudly enumerate the special religious status of the temple wife, while expressing some ambivalence about how women may simultaneously inhabit the roles of good wives, wise mothers, and supporting priests. This article seeks to analyze the legal and educational descriptions of bomori produced from the Meiji to the early Showa periods in order to locate this female religious professional both within the spectrum of Buddhist practitioners and in the context of early twentieth-century gender norms in Japan. Abstract : At the intersection of two important questions in the study of Japanese Buddhism today-namely, the matter of who may be called a nun, and the problem of how to appraise the widespread phenomenon of clerical marriage and family-run temples in contemporary Japan-lies the story of a relatively unknown religious professional, the Shin temple wife, or bomori. Letters of the Nun Eshinni : Dobbins, James C.:2004-10:280: 70.
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