Dogen Studies
1985 • 180 pages

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The induction of Dо̄gen into the modern academic world, or per­haps more accurately, the academic world's first real engagement with Dо̄gen came about 1924 when Watsuji Tetsurо̄ (1889–1960) published a provocative essay entitled "Shaman Dо̄gen." It was this essay that to many of Watsuji's contemporaries seemed to rescue Dо̄gen from what they considered to be his entrapment for nearly seven centuries in the sectarian embrace of the Sо̄tо̄ school. Watsuji insisted that Dо̄gen no longer should be thought of as belonging exclusively to the monastic community. Claiming, instead, that Dо̄gen "belongs to mankind," Watsuji with this declaration initiated the non-sectarian study of this thirteenth-century figure and in effect commenced what are called Dо̄gen Studies [Dagen kenkyii] in modern times. As one way of exploring what it might possibly mean to say that Dо̄gen "belongs to mankind," the Kuroda Institute held a conference on Dо̄gen at Tassajara Springs, California from October 8 to 10, 1981. The essays of this volume are a part of its result.

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5 released books

Kuroda Studies in East Asian Buddhism

Kuroda Studies in East Asian Buddhism is a 5-book series with 5 released primary works first released in 1983 with contributions by John R. McRae, Alan Sponberg, and Daniel B. Stevenson.

Studies in Ch'an and Hua-Yen
Dogen Studies
The Northern School and the Formation of Early Ch'an Buddhism
Traditions of Meditation in Chinese Buddhism
Buddhist Hermeneutics

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