On Being Nonreligious in Contemporary Japan: Decline, Antipathy, and Aversion to Institutions
By (Author) Ian Reader
By (author) Clark Chilson
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
10th July 2025
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Agnosticism and atheism
East Asian religions
Anthropology
211.60952
Hardback
278
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Challenging the notion of the nonreligious in Japan being religious through tradition and institution, this book demonstrates how negativity and antipathy for religion relate to religious decline in Japan today.
Although the Japanese say they are nonreligious because they do not identify with a particular religious tradition or institution, they are in fact religious through their traditional practices; New Years Visits to Shinto Shrines, Buddhist mortuary rites and festivals (matsuri) are typically seen as customs rather than as religious. This book challenges this answer by arguing that many Japanese say they are nonreligious because they actually dislike religion and want to distance themselves from it.
To support this argument, the book explores how religion is in decline in Japan today. Demonstrating how negative images of religion are produced in the mainstream media, in popular culture, and by various groups and people, this book also explores specific case studies such as anti-cult organizations, lawyers, government agencies, intellectuals, and religious organizations.
Ian Reader and Clark Chilson argue that popular negative images and perceptions about religion create an ecology of dislike, which encourages disassociation from religion and exacerbates problems for religions today. Overall, this book provides a new perspective on religion in contemporary Japan that has implications for our understanding of secularization in the modern world.
Ian Reader is Professor Emeritus at the University of Manchester, UK. He has written and taught widely on religion, especially in Japan. His books include Religion and Tourism in Japan (Bloomsbury, 2023) and Dynamism and the Ageing of a Japanese 'New' Religion (Bloomsbury, 2019)
Clark Chilson is Associate Professor in Religious Studies at the University of Pittsburgh, USA and is author of Secrecys Power: Covert Shin Buddhists in Japan and Contradictions of Concealment (2014). He has written numerous articles on religion and on non-religious spiritual care in Japan.