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This is the first detailed English-language study of the Obaku
branch of Japanese Zen. Beginning with the founding of the sect in
Japan by Chinese monks in the seventeenth century, the volume
describes the conflicts and maneuverings within the Buddhist and
secular communities that led to the emergence of Obaku as a
distinctive institution during the early Tokugawa period.
Throughout the author explores a wide range of texts and includes
excerpts from important primary documents such as the Zenrin
shuheishu and the Obaku geki, translated here for the first time.
She provides an impressive portrait of the founding Chinese
leadership and the first generation of Japanese converts, whose
work enabled the fledgling sect to grow and take its place beside
existing branches of the closely related Rinzai Zen sect. Obaku's
distinctive Chinese practices and characteristics set it apart from
its Japanese counterparts. In an innovative investigation of these
differences, the author uses techniques derived from the
contemporary study of new religious movements in the West to
explain both Obaku's successes and failures in its relations with
other Japanese Buddhist sects. She illuminates the role of
government support in the initial establishment of the main
monastery, Mampuku-ji, and the ongoing involvement of the bakufu
and the imperial family in Obaku's early development. Hers is a
thorough and well-governed analysis that brings to the fore a
religious movement that has been much neglected in Japanese and
Western scholarship despite its tremendous influence on modern
Japanese Buddhism as a whole.
Love, Roshi explores the relationship between Robert Baker Aitken
(1917 2010), American Zen teacher and author, and his distant
correspondents, individuals drawn to Zen teachings and practice
through books. Aitken, founder of the Honolulu Diamond Sangha,
promoted Zen to a wide audience in works such as Taking the Path of
Zen and The Mind of Clover. Aitken s twentieth-century American Zen
valued social justice and was compatible with work and family life.
Helen J. Baroni makes use of Aitken s extensive correspondence
preserved in an archive at the University of Hawaii to provide a
window to view the beliefs and practices of the least-studied and a
difficult to study segment of the Western Buddhist community,
Buddhist sympathizers and solo practitioners. The book looks at the
concerns of these correspondents, which included questions on
meditation, dealing with isolation as a Buddhist, finding teachers
and disillusion with teachers, and being a Buddhist in prison,
among a myriad of other matters. The writers letters reveal much
about their notion of Zen and their image of a Zen master. Coverage
of Aitken s responses provides insight into the accommodation of
solo practitioners and into the development of a particular strain
of American Buddhism."
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