Souls of Zen: Ancestors and Agency in Contemporary Japanese Temple Buddhism

2012

  • Documentary

8.0

2

June 1, 2012

1h 29m

Official Website

Synopsis

The Japanese population’s reaction to the catastrophe of March 2011 has been described as “stoic” by the Western media. The Japanese code of conduct is indeed deeply rooted in their Buddhist traditions, and young filmmakers Tim Graf and Jakob Montrasio observe in detail what this means for the people and their religion. At graveyards, in temples, at monasteries and with families, they question the impact this triple affliction has had on the lives and beliefs of the inhabitants. How deeply do their beliefs affect their grieving? What role do the monks play in assisting people with their grief? And, what effects has this enormous catastrophe had on their religious rituals? SOULS OF ZEN inserts the events of March 2011 into the context of traditional Zen Buddhism, examining Japan’s religiousness and the beliefs of those practising it at a crucial turning point.

Info

Original Title

Souls of Zen: Ancestors and Agency in Contemporary Japanese Temple Buddhism

Spoken Languages

English, Japanese

Production Countries

Germany, Japan

Budget

$100,000

Revenue

N/A

Production & Crew

Production Companies

Director

Writer

Producer

Composer

Screenplay

Cast

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