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This volume is the first in a series of full-length English
translations from one of the foremost classics in Daoist religious
literature, the Zhen gao or Declarations of the Perfected. The
Declarations is a collection of poems, accounts of the dead,
instructions, and meditation methods received by the Daoist Yang Xi
(330-ca. 386 BCE) from celestial beings and shared by him with his
patrons and students. These fragments of revealed material were
collected and annotated by the eminent scholar and Daoist Tao
Hongjing (456-536), allowing us access to these distant worlds and
unfamiliar strategies of self-perfection. Bokenkamp's full
translation highlights the literary nature of Daoist revelation and
the place of the Declarations in the development of Chinese
letters. It further details interactions with the Chinese throne
and the aristocracy and demonstrates ways that Buddhist borrowings
helped shape Daoism much earlier than has been assumed. This first
volume also contains heretofore unrecognized reconfigurations of
Buddhist myth and practice that Yang Xi introduced to his Daoist
audience.
This innovative work on Chinese concepts of the afterlife is the
result of Stephen Bokenkamp's groundbreaking study of Chinese
scripture and the incorporation of Indic concepts into the Chinese
worldview. Here, he explores how Chinese authors, including Daoists
and non-Buddhists, received and deployed ideas about rebirth from
the third to the sixth centuries C.E. In tracing the antecedents of
these scriptures, Bokenkamp uncovers a stunning array of
non-Buddhist accounts that provide detail on the realms of the
dead, their denizens, and human interactions with them. Bokenkamp
demonstrates that the motive for the Daoist acceptance of Buddhist
notions of rebirth lay not so much in the power of these ideas as
in the work they could be made to do.
Introducing the reader to ancient scriptures, this work provides a
systematic and accesible overview of Daoism (c. 2nd-6th centuries).
Representative works from each of the principle Daoist traditions
comprise the basic structure of the book, with each chapter
accompanied by an introduction that places the material within an
historical context. Included are translations from the earliest
Daoist commentary to Laozi's "Daode jing" (Tao Te Ching);
historical documents relating the history of the early Daoist
church; a petitioning ritual used to free believers from complaints
brought against them by the dead; and two complete scriptures, one
on individual meditation practice and another designed to rescue
humanity from the terrors of hell through recitation of its
powerful charms. In addition, Bokenkamp elucidates the connections
Daoism holds with other schools of thought, particularly
Confucianism and Buddhism.
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