RT Article T1 To Ise at All Costs: Religious and Economic Implications of Early Modern Nukemairi JF Japanese journal of religious studies VO 33 IS 1 SP 75 OP 114 A1 Nenzi, Laura LA English PB Nanzan Institute YR 2006 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1698754477 AB If pilgrimages are ideal platforms for contention, nowhere more than in early modern nukemairi did tensions come to the fore so prominently, and contrasting interests clash so stridently. This article looks at Edo-period (1600-1868) unauthorized pilgrimages to highlight the inherent disjunctions between the interests of the individual and those of the community, and between the priorities of faith and the practical necessities of the economy. It also follows the evolution of nukemairi over time by looking at the repercussions that the fiscal reforms of the late eighteenth century had on the identification of travelers as "runaways." K1 Amulets K1 Cash K1 Fugitives K1 Merchants K1 Pilgrimages K1 Religious Studies K1 Samura K1 Travel K1 Travelers K1 Women