The record of Linji : a new translation of the Linjilu in the light of ten Japanese Zen commentaries 臨濟録

書誌事項

The record of Linji : a new translation of the Linjilu in the light of ten Japanese Zen commentaries = 臨濟録

Jeffrey L. Broughton with Elise Yoko Watanabe

Oxford University Press, c2013

タイトル読み

The record of Linji : a new translation of the Linjilu in the light of ten Japanese Zen commentaries = リンザイロク

lin zai lu

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 5

この図書・雑誌をさがす

注記

Includes bibliographical references (p. [289]-292) and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

The Linjilu (Record of Linji or LJL) is one of the foundational texts of Chan/Zen Buddhist literature, and an accomplished work of baihua (vernacular) literature. Its indelibly memorable title character, the Master Linji-infamous for the shout, the whack of the rattan stick, and the declaration that sutras are toilet paper-is himself an embodiment of the very teachings he propounds to his students: he is a "true person," free of dithering; he exhibits the non-verbal, unconstrained spontaneity of the buddha-nature; he is always active, never passive; and he is aware that nothing is lacking at all, at any time, in his round of daily activities. This bracing new translation transmits the LJL's living expression of Zen's "personal realization of the meaning beyond words," as interpreted by ten commentaries produced by Japanese Zen monks, over a span of over four centuries, ranging from the late 1300s, when Five-Mountains Zen flourished in Kyoto and Kamakura, through the early 1700s, an age of thriving interest in the LJL. These Zen commentaries form a body of vital, in-house interpretive literature never before given full credit or center stage in previous translations of the LJL. Here, their insights are fully incorporated into the translation itself, allowing the reader unimpeded access throughout, with more extensive excerpts available in the notes. Also provided is a translation of the earliest extant material on Linji, including a neglected transmission-record entry relating to his associate Puhua, which indicate that the LJL is a fully-fledged work of literature that has undergone editorial changes over time to become the compelling work we know today.

目次

  • Acknowledgments
  • Abbreviations
  • Introduction
  • Translation of the Linjilu
  • Part I: Dharma-Hall Convocations
  • Part II: Sangha Instruction
  • Part III: Calibrating and Adjudicating
  • Part IV: Record of the Karman of the Master's Career
  • Part V: Stupa Record of Chan Master Linji Huizhao
  • Yuanjue Zongyan's Xuanhe 2 (1120) Linjilu Edition (LJL)
  • Appendix 1: Pre-Song Linji and Puhua Sayings and Episodes Preserved in the Collection of the Patriarchal Hall (Zutangji)
  • Appendix 2: Pre-Song Linji Sayings Preserved in the Mind-Mirror Record (Zongjinglu)
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index

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