Sources of East Asian tradition: 1 Premodern Asia
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Format: | Buch |
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Sprache: | English |
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New York
Columbia Univ. Press
2008
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Schriftenreihe: | Introduction to Asian civilizations
Introduction to Asian civilizations |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XXIV, 909 S. |
ISBN: | 9780231143042 9780231143059 |
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a Sources of East Asian tradition |n 1 |p Premodern Asia |c ed. by Wm. Theodore de Bary. With the collaboration of Irene Bloom ... |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | CONTENTS
Preface xxiii
Acknowledgments xxv
PART ONE
Traditional China
Explanaton Note 3
Contributors 5
Chronohgy 7
1. The Oracle-Bone lnscriptions of the Lxite Shang Dynast, 13
DAVID N. KEIGHTIKY
The Shang Dynasty 13
The Oraclc-Bone lnscriptions i=;
The High God (Di) and Other Powers 16
Divination and Legitimation 19
The Legacy of Shang 20
vi CONTENTS
2. Classical Sources ofChinese Tradition 22
BURTON WATSON, DAVID S. NIVISON, IRENE BLOOM
The Classic of Documents 25
The Canon of Yao and the Canon of Shun 25
Shao Announcement 26
The Classic ofOdes 27
From the Greater Ödes 27
3. Confucius and the Analects 29
IRENE BLOOM
Selections from the Analects 32
4. Mozi: Utility, Uniformity, and Universal Love 41
BURTON WATSON
Selections from the Mozi 43
Section 9: Honoring the Worthy (Part 2) 43
Section 11: Identifying with the Superior (Part 1) 44
Section 16: Universal Love (Part 3) 46
Section 26: The Will of Heaven (Part 1) 47
Section 27: The Will of Heaven (Part 2) 47
Section 39: Against Confucians (Part 2) 48
5. The Way of Laozi and Zhuangzi 49
Metaphysics and Government in the Laozi (I. Bloom) 49
From the Daodejing 51
Transformation and Transcendence in the Zhuangzi
(B. Watson, A. C. Graham) 60
From Chapter 1, Free and Easy Wandering (BW) 61
From Chapter 2, The Sorting Which Evens Things Out (ACG, IB) 62
From Chapter 3, The Secret of Caring for Life (BW) 65
From Chapter 4, In the World of Men (BW) 66
From Chapter 6, The Great and Venerable Teacher (BW) 67
From Chapter 7, Fit for Emperors and Kings (W. T. de Bary) 68
6. The Evolution ofthe Confucian Tradition in Antiquity 69
Mencius (I. Bloom) 71
Selections from the Mencius 73
The Duty of Ministers to Reprove a Ruler 76
Contents vii
Mencius Arguments with Yang Zhu and Mozi 82
Xunzi(IB) 92
Selections from the Xunzi 94
Chapter 1: Encouraging Learning 94
Chapter 2: Cultivating Oneself 97
Chapter 9: The Regulations of the King 97
Chapter 17: A Discussion of Heaven 99
Chapter 19: A Discussion of Rites 101
Chapter 23: Human Nature as Evil 102
The Zuozhuan (B. Watson) 104
Selection from the Zuozhuan 104
7. Legalists and Militarists 106
The Guanzi (W. Allyn Rickett) 108
The Book ofLord Shang (}. J. L. Duyvendak) 109
The Hart Feizi (B. Watson) 112
Li Si: Legalist Theories in Practice (BW) 115
Memorial on the Abolition of the Enfeoffment System 116
Memorial on the Burning of Books 117
Memorial on Exercising Heavy Censure 118
The Military Texts: The Sunzi (K. Smith) 119
Selections from the Sunzi 121
8. The Han Reaction to Qin Absolutism 126
Jia Yi: The Faulte of Qin (D. W. Y. Kwok) 127
The Rebellion of Chen She and Wu Guang (B. Watson) 129
The Rise of Liu Bang, Founder of the Han (BW) 129
Liu Bang Becomes the First Emperor of the Han Dynasty (BW) 130
9. Syncretic Visions of State, Society, and Cosmos 131
HAROLD ROTH, SARAH QUEEN, NATHAN SIVIN
The Theoretical Basis of the Imperial Institution 132
The Springs and Autumns ofMr. Lü (NS) 132
The Round Way 133
The Huang-Lao Silk Manuscripts (HR, SQ) 134
Book 1: Normative Standards, Part 1 134
Normative Standards, Part 5 136
The Guanzi 138
VÜi CONTENTS
The Syncretist Chapters of the Zhuangzi (A. C. Graham, B. Watson) 140
The World ofThought (BW) 141
The Huainanzi on Rulership (HR) 143
Huainanzi 9, The Techniques of Rulership 143
Huainanzi 14, Inquiring Words 144
The Medical Microcosm (NS) 145
The Divine Pivot 147
A Syncretist Perspective on the Six Schools 149
Sima Tan: On the Six Lineages ofThought (HR, SQ) 150
10. The Imperial Order and Han Syntheses 152
Guidelines for Han Rulers (D. W. Y. Kwok) 15 3
Lu Jia: The Natural Order and the Human Order 154
Jia Yi: The Primacy of the People 156
Dong Zhongshu 157
Luxuriant Gems ofthe Spring and Autumn Annais (S. Queen) 159
Deriving Political Norms from Microcosmic and
Macrocosmic Models 159
The Conduct of Heaven and Earth 160
The Responsibilities of Rulership 161
Establishing the Primal Numen 161
The Way ofthe King Penetrates Three 162
Defining Human Nature 163
An In-Depth Examination of Names and Designations 163
Interpreting Omens 164
Humaneness Must Precede Wisdom 164
Self-Cultivation 164
Standards of Humaneness and Rightness 164
The Issue of Moral Autonomy 166
The Codifying of the Confucian Canon (B. Watson) 167
State Orthodoxy 167
State University 167
Civil Service 168
The Rivalry Between Legalism and Confucianism 168
The Confucian Canon 169
The Formation ofthe Classic ofChanges (R. J. Lynn) 170
The Commentary on the Appended Phrases, Part 1 172
The Commentary on the Appended Phrases, Part 2 173
Contents ix
Heaven, Earth, and the Human in the Classic ofFiliality
(W. T. De Bary) 174
The Classic ofFiliality 175
The Record ofRites and the Ritual Tradition 178
The Great Leaming (I. Bloom) 179
The Mean (IB) 181
The Meaning of Sacrifices (IB) 184
The Evolution ofRites (BW) 185
The Record ofMusic (IB) 186
Ban Gu: Discourses in the White Tiger Hall 187
Han Views of the Universal Order (BW) 18 8
The Creation of the Universe 188
From the Huainanzi 188
The Five Phases 189
The Reconstruction of Chinese History 191
The Concept and Marking of Time 192
11. The Economic Order 194
BURTON WATSON
Chao Cuo: Memorial on the Encouragement of Agriculture 195
Dong Zhongshu: Memorial on Land Reform 197
State Control of Commerce and Industry 198
The Debate on Salt and hon 199
The Reforms of Wang Mang 201
Wang Mang: Edict on Land Reform 202
12. The Great Han Historians 205
BURTON WATSON
The Records ofthe Grand Historian 206
Sima Qian: The Sacred Duty ofthe Historian 208
The Writing ofthe First Dynastie History 209
13. Leaming of the Mysterious 211
RICHARD JOHN LYNN, WING-TSIT CHAN
Wang Bi (RJL) 212
General Remarks on the Changes ofthe Zhou (RJL) 213
The Sage (RJL) 214
Guo Xiang: Commentary on the Zhuangzi (WTC) 214
X CONTENTS
14. Daoist Religion 217
NATHAN SIVIN, KRISTOFER SCHIPPER
Commandments of Lord Lao (KS) 219
The Divine Incdntations Scripture (NS) 220
15. The Introduction ofBuddhism 223
LEON HURVITZ, TSAI HENG-TING
Basic Teachings of Buddhism 223
The Coming of Buddhism to China 228
Mouzi: Disposing ofError 229
Huiyuan: A Monk Does Not Bow Down Before a King 231
Admonitions of the Fanwang Sütra (THT) 234
16. Schools of Buddhist Doctrine 238
LEON HURVITZ, BURTON WATSON, DANIEL STEVENSON,
GEORGE TANABE, WING-TSIT CHAN
The General Character of Doctrinal Buddhism 238
Schools of Chinese Buddhist Philosophy 240
The Three-Treatise School 241
Jizang: The Profound Meaning ofthe Three Treatises (LH) 243
The Lotus School: The Tiantai Synthesis (DS) 244
Excerpts from the Lotus Sütra (BW) 246
Huisi: The Method ofCalming and Contemplation in the Mahäyäna (LH) 256
The Flower Garland (Huayan) School (GT) 257
The Flower Garden Sütra 257
Buddhism s Assimilation to Tang Political Culture (C. Orzech) 260
The Humane King as Protector ofBuddhism 260
iy. Schools of Buddhist Practice 264
LEON HURVITZ, DANIEL STEVENSON, PHILIP B. YAMPOLSKY,
CHÜN-FANG YÜ
The Pure Land School 264
Daochuo: Compendium on the Happy Land (DS, LH) 266
Shandao: The Parable ofthe White Path (W. T. de Bary) 268
The Meditation School 270
The Platform Sütra ofthe Sixth Patriarch (PY) 273
The Legend of Baizhang, Founder of Chan Monastic Discipline
(T. G. Foulk) 279
Regulations ofthe Chan School (TGF) 281
Contents xi
The Chanyuan Monastic Code 283
Buddhist Rituals and Devotional Practices (CFY) 288
Zhongfeng Mingben: Admonition on Filiality 288
18. Social Life and Political Culture in the Tang 290
The Role of Confucianism in the Tang 291
House Instructions ofMr. Yan (A. Dien) 292
The Great Tang Code (W. Johnson) 296
Zhangsun Wuji: The Tang Code 297
Han Yu and the Confucian Way (C. Hartman) 301
Essentials of the Moral Way (CH) 302
Memorial on the Bone of Buddha (B. Watson) 305
Emperor Wuzong s Edict on the Suppression of Buddhism (BW) 306
19. The Confucian Revival in the Song 308
WM. THEODORE DE BARY
The Confucian Program of Reform 311
The Way as the Basis for Government Policy 313
Cheng Yi: Memorial to Emperor Renzong 313
The New Laws of Wang Anshi 315
Wang Anshi: Memorial to Emperor Renzong 31g
Wang Anshi: In Defense of Five Major Policies 322
Opposition to the New Laws of Wang Anshi 324
Sima Guang: A Petition to Do Away with the Most Harmful
ofthe New Laws 324
The Learning of the Emperors and the Classics Mat 326
Fan Zuyu: The Leaming ofthe Emperors (M. Guarino) 327
Cheng Yi: Letter to the Empress Dowager Concerning the Classies Mat (MG) 328
The Writing of History (C. Schirokauer) 329
Sima Guang: History as Mirror (CS) 331
Zhu Xi: History and Philosophy in Tandem (B. Watson) 333
20. Neo-Confucianism: The Philosophy of Human Nature
and the Way of the Sage 336
Zhou Dunyi: The Metaphysics and Practice of Sagehood
(Joseph Adler) 338
Explanation ofthe Diagram ofthe Supreme Polarity 339
Penetrating the Classic ofChanges 342
XÜ CONTENTS
Zhang Zai and the Unity of all Creation (W. T. Chan) 344
The Western Inscription 344
Correcting Youthful Ignorance 345
The Cheng Brothers: Principle, Human Nature, and the
Learning of the Way (WTC) 347
Principle and the Universe 347
Human Nature 348
Cheng Hao s Reply to Zhang Zai s Letter on the Stabilizing of Human Nature 349
Reverent Seriousness and Humanity 349
On Understanding the Nature of Humanity 350
The Synthesis of Song Neo-Confucianism in Zhu Xi
(W. T. Chan, W. T. de Bary) 3 51
Principle and Material-Force 353
The Supreme Ultimate (Polarity) 355
Human Nature, the Nature of Things, and Their Destiny 356
The Nature as Principle 356
The Psycho-Physical Nature 357
The Mind-and-Heart 358
21. Zhu Xi s Neo-Confucian Program 361
WM. THEODORE DE BARY
Preface to the Great Leaming by Chapter and Phrase 362
The Great Learning by Chapter and Phrase, Chapter 1 364
Preface to the Mean by Chapter and Phrase 368
The Mean by Chapter and Phrase, Chapter 1 372
Personal Proposais for Schools and Official Recruitment (R. G. Chu) 373
Articles of the White Deer Grotto Academy 374
Preface to the Family Rituals (Patricia Ebrey) 376
Proposal for Community Granaries (Thomas H. C. Lee) 378
Proclamation of Instructions (R.G. Chu) 380
The Lü Family Community Compact, Amended and Emended
(J. Meskill) 383
22. Ideological Foundations ofLate Imperial China 387
WM. THEODORE DE BARY, EDWARD FARMER, JOHN DARDESS
Xu Heng and Khubilai Khan (WTdB) 387
Five Measures Required by the Times 388
The Examination Debate Under Khubilai 390
Sage King and Sage Minister: Ouyang Xuan on Khubilai and Xu Herrn 307
Contents xiii
Ming Foundations of Late Imperial China 394
Ming Taizu: August Ming Ancestral Instruction (EF) 395
Education and Examinations (JD) 397
Ming Taizu: Piacard for the Instruction of the People (EF) 398
23. Neo-Confucian Education 402
WM. THEODORE DE BARY
Zhu Xi: Preface to the Elementary Learning 404
Wang Yinglin: The Three Character Classic 405
The Standard School Curriculum 408
Zhen Dexiu: Instructions for Children (R. G. Chu) 409
Women s Education (T. Kelleher) 410
Ban Zhao: Admonitions for Women (N. L. Swann) 411
Madam Cheng: Classic ofFiliality for Women (TK) 415
Song Ruozhao: Analects for Women (TK) 418
Empress Xu: Instructions for the Inner Quarters (TK) 422
24. Seifand Society in the Ming 428
Wang Yangming 429
Wang Yangming s New Learning of the Mind-and-Heart 429
Memoir on the Reconstruction of Shanyin Prefectural School (W. T. de Bary) 430
Questions on the Great Leaming (W. T. Chan) 431
The Identification of Mind and Principle 434
The Unity of Knowing and Acting 435
The Colloquy at the Tianquan Bridge 435
Social and Political Measures of Wang Yangming 437
Fundamental Ideas on Elementary Education (WTC) 437
The Community Compact for Southern Ganzhou (WTC) 439
The Wang Yangming School 441
Wang Gen: The Common Man as Sage (WTdB) 442
The Huainan Investigation of Things 444
Clear Wisdom and Self-Preservation 445
Li Zhi: Arch-Individualist (WTdB) 446
The Childlike Mind-and-Heart 448
Phony Sages 448
The Legitimacy of Being Self-Interested 450
Luo Qinshun and the Philosophy of Qi (I. Bloom) 451
Monism of Qi 452
XIV CONTENTS
Human Nature 454
Desires and Feelings 454
The Practical Learning of Lü Kun (J. H. Smith) 455
Restoration of Community Schools 456
Morality Books (R. G. Chu, WTdB) 458
The Treatise ofthe Most Exalted One on Moral Retribution (WTC) 459
The Silent Way ofRecompense (WTC) 461
The Donglin Academy (H. Busch, WTdB) 463
Gu Xiancheng: Compact for Meetings ofthe Donglin Academy 465
Liu Zongzhou on Life and Death (T. Weiming) 468
Teaching on Life and Death 468
Glossary ofKey Terms 471
Pinyin to Wade-Giles Romanization Chart 474
PART TWO
Traditional Korea
Explanatory Note 479
Contributors 481
Chronology 483
25. Origins ofKorean Culture 485
The Foundation Myth 486
Tangun 487
Korea in the Chinese Dynastie Histories 488
Accounts ofthe Eastern Barbarians 488
26. The Rise ofthe Three Kingdoms 491
King Chinhüng s Monument at Maun Pass 492
Political Thought 493
Ch ang Chori 494
Social Structure 494
King Hüngdök s Edict on Clothing, Carts, and Housing 495
Söl Kyedu 496
27. The Introduction ofBuddhism 497
Paekche Buddhism 498
Kyömik and the Disciplinary School 4QQ
Contents xv
Hyöngwang and the Lotus Scripture 499
Silla Buddhism 501
Pöpkong Declares Buddhism the National Faith 501
Maitreya and Esoteric Buddhism 504
Maitreya s Incarnation as a Hwarang 504
The Hwarang 506
Origins of the Hwarang 507
28. Consolidation ofthe State 508
Unification of the Three Kingdoms 508
Account ofthe Silla-Tang War 509
Confucian Political Thought 510
King Sinmun s Proclamation of His Accession 510
Confucian Learning 511
The Royal Confucian Academy 512
Daoism 512
Inscription on an Image at Kamsan Monastery (Silla) 513
29. The Rise of Buddhism 515
Wönhyo s Buddhist Philosophy 517
Introduction to Exposition ofthe Adamantine Absorption Scripture 519
Arouse Your Mind and Practice! 522
Commentary on the Awakening of Faith 524
Diagram of the Dharmadhätu According to the One Vehicle 524
Belief in the Pure Land 526
Ungmyön 527
30. Local Clans and the Rise ofthe Meditation School 528
The Rise of Local Chiefs 529
Establishment of the Meditation School 530
The Life of Musang 530
Tofli: Questions and Answers with Chief of Clerics Chiwön 532
31. Early Koryö Political Structure 534
Founding of Koryö 535
Formation of Government 536
Wang Kön: Ten Injunctions 536
Development of Confucian Polity 538
xvi CONTENTS
Ch oe Süngno: On Current Affairs 538
Ch oe Süngno: On Buddhism 539
32. Military Rufe and Late Koryö Reform 540
Establishment of Militaiy Rule 541
Ch oe Ch unghön: The Ten Injunctions 542
Establishment of the Personnel Authority 543
Private Armies 543
Relations with the Mongols 544
Yi Chehyön: Opposition to Yuan Policies 545
Late Koryö Reforms 546
Yi Chehyön: Reform Proposais 546
Yi Saek: Memorial on Current Affairs 548
33. Buddhism: The Ch önt ae and Chogye Schools 550
Resurgence of Buddhism 551
Chinul: The Compactof the Samädhi and Prajnä Community 552
Chinul and the Chogye School 553
Chinul: Excerpts from the Exposition ofthe Flower Garland Scripture : Preface 554
Publication of the Tripitaka 556
Yi Kyubo: Royal Prayer on the Occasion ofthe Production ofthe Tripitaka 557
34. Neo-Confucianism 558
Yi Saek: The Spread of Neo-Confucianism 559
ChöngTojön: Philosophical Rebuttal of Buddhism and Daoism 559
History 561
Kim Pusik: On Presenting the Historical Record ofthe Three Kingdoms
to the King 561
35. Political Thought in Early Chosön 563
Ruling the New Dynasty 563
Kwön Kün: On Royal Action 564
New Government 564
Chöng Tojön: On the Prime Minister 565
The WayofPrinciple 566
Cho Kwangjo: On Problems ofthe Time 566
Cho Kwangjo: On the Superior Man and the Inferior Man 567
On Sage Learning 567
Contents xvii
Yi Hwang: Memorial on Six Points 568
Yi I: Memorial in Ten Thousand Words 571
36. Culture 573
Invention of the Korean Alphabet 574
King Sejong: Preface to Correct Sounds to Instruct the People 574
Chöng Inji: PostScript to Correct Sounds to Instruct the People 575
Ch oe Malli: Opposition to the Korean Alphabet 575
Education and Scholarship 576
Chöng Tojön: Establishment of Schools 577
Royal Confucian Acaderny 577
White Cloud Grotto Academy 578
The Recruitment Examinations 578
Song Hyön: On the Civil Service Examination 579
Printing Books 580
Song Hyön: On Printing 581
37. Social Life 582
The Role of Rites 583
Song Hyön: The Fundamental Role of Rites 583
Yi Chi: On the Establishment of Domestic Shrines 584
The Position of Women 584
On Differentiating Between Main Wife and Concubine 585
On Treating the Main Wife 585
Prohibition Against Remarriage of Women 586
Sin Sukchu: Honse Rules 587
38. Economy 590
The Land System 591
Chöng Tojön: On Land 591
Promotion of Agriculture 592
King Sejong: Edict for the Promotion of Agriculture 593
39. Thought 595
Yi Hwang and the Sage Learning 595
Ten Diagrams on Sage Learning 596
Yil 603
Letter to Song Hon 604
XVÜi CONTENTS
40. Buddhism 606
Kihwa 606
Treatise on Manifesting Rightness 607
Kim Sisüp 608
On No-Thought 608
Hyujöng 608
Secrets of Meditation and Doctrine 609
PART THREE
Traditional Japan
Explanatory Note 613
Contributors 615
Chronology 617
41. The Earliest Records of Japan 621
Japan in the Chinese Dynastie Histories 623
Accounts of the Eastern Barbarians 624
History of the Kingdom of Wei 624
History of the Sui Dynasty 626
The Earliest Japanese Chronicles 627
Birthof the Land 628
42. Early Shinto 630
Legends Concerning Shinto Deities 632
Birth of the Sun Goddess 633
Descent of the Divine Grandson with the Three Imperial Regalia 634
Shinto Prayers 635
Norito for the Festival of the Sixth Month 636
The Great Exorcism of the Last Day of the Sixth Month 637
43. Prince Shötoku and His Constitution 640
The Reign of Suiko and Rule of Shötoku 642
The Empress Suiko 642
The Seventeen-Article Constitution of Prince Shötoku 646
The Lotus Sütra 651
The Vimalakirti Sütra 652
Contents xix
44. Chinese Thought and Institutions in Early ]apan 656
Chinese-Style History and the Imperial Concept 662
From the Preface to Records ofAncient Matters 663
Emperor Jinmu 664
The Reform Era 666
Inauguration of the Great Reform Era 666
Reform Edicts 667
The Commentary on the Legal Code 669
Regulations for Fitness Reports 669
New Compilation of the Register of Families 670
Preface in the Form of a Memorial to Emperor Saga 670
45. Nara Buddhism 672
The Sütra of the Golden Light 676
Buddhism and the State in Nara Japan 677
Proclamation of the Emperor Shömu on the Erection of the
Great Buddha Image 677
The Bodhisattva Gyögi 678
Regulation of the Buddhist Orders by the Court 680
Edicts of the Empress Shötoku Concerning Dökyö 681
Edict of October 19, 764 681
Edict of November 26, 766 682
The Merger of Buddhist and Shinto Deities 683
46. Saichö and Mount Hiei 684
RYUSAKU TSUNODA, PAUL GRONER
The Tendai Lotus Teaching 689
Saichö: Vow of Uninterrupted Study of the Lotus Sütra 689
Regulations for Students of the Mountain School in Six Articles I 690
Regulations for Students of the Mountain School II 692
Subsequent History of Tendai and Mount Hiei (PG) 695
47. Kükai and Esoteric Buddhism 698
Kükai and His Master 702
The Transmission of Esoteric Buddhism 702
Enlightenment in This Bodily Existence 704
The Ten Steges ofReligious Consciousness 706
XX CONTENTS
Recapitulation of the Ten Stages of Religious Consciousness 707
A School of Arts and Sciences 708
The Spread ofEsoteric Buddhism 709
Sex and Buddhahood: A Shingon Heresy 712
Selections from The Precious Mirror 712
Annen: Maxims for the Young 714
48. Amida, the Pure Land, and the Response ofthe
Old Buddhism to the New 719
Traditional Pure Land Buddhism 725
Genshin: The Essentials of Salvation 725
Innovators of the New Pure Land Buddhism 727
Honen: The One-Page Testament 727
Shinran: The Lamentation and Self-Reflection ofGutoku Shinran 728
Shinran: A Record in Lament of Divergencies 729
Rennyo: Rennyo s Rules 730
Ippen: Selections from A Hundred Sayings 731
The Revival of Earlier Buddhism 732
Myöe: Smashing the Evil Chariot 732
Jökei: Gedatsu Shönin s Petition for Reviving the Precepts 735
49. New Views ofHistory j^j
PAUL VARLEY
Medieval Uses of the Past 739
Jien 740
Gukanshö 741
One Hundred Kings 744
Helping Emperors Rule 744
An Appeal to Retired Emperor Go-Toba 745
Kitabatake Chikafusa and the Southern Court 746
Direct Succession ofGods and Sovereigns J4J
Fujiwara and Murakami Genji as Assistants to Emperors 750
On Imperial Restoration 751
50. The Way of the Warrior 754
PAUL VARLEY
Taira and Minamoto 758
The Tale ofHögen 759
Contents xxi
The Mighty Fall at Last, They Are Dust Before the Wind 761
Eastern Warriors 762
The Taira as Courtier-Warriors 763
Chronicle ofGreat Peace: The Loyalist Heroes 765
51. Nichiren: The Sun and the Lotus 773
PHILIP B. YAMPOLSKY
Rectification for the Peace of the Nation 775
The Eye-Opener 779
52. Zen Buddhism 782
WILLIAM BODIFORD
Zen in Japan 784
Eisai: Propagation ofZen for the Protection ofthe State 787
Dogen: How to Practice Buddhism 792
The Fully Apparent Case 794
Buddha Nature 795
MusöSoseki: Sermon at the Dedication of Tenryüji Dharma Hall 797
Reflections on the Enmity Between Go-Daigo and the Shogun, Ashikaga Takauji 799
53. Shinto in Medieval Japan 801
Yoshida Kanetomo: Essentials ofPrime Shinto (A. Grapard) 806
Kitabatake Chikafusa: Chronicle ofthe Direct Succession of
Gods and Sovereigns 80g
54. The Vocabulary ofjapanese Aesthetics 815
The Way of Tea (P. Varley) 815
Drink Tea and Prolong Life 820
Murata Shukö: Letter ofthe Heart 821
The Spiritual Basis of the Tea Ceremony 822
55. Women s Education 824
Keisei: A Companion in Solitude (R. Pandey) 825
Mujü Ichien: Mirror for Women (R. Morrell) 826
56. Law and Precepts for the Warrior Houses 829
PAUL VARLEY
The Jöei Code 830
XXÜ CONTENTS
The Lawof the Muromachi Shogunate 832
The Kenmu Code 833
The Law of the Warrior Houses in the Age of War in the Provinces 835
The Yüki House Code 837
Precepts of the Warrior Houses 839
House Precepts in the Sengoku Age 841
Seventeen-Article Testament of Asakura Toshikage 842
jj. The Regime ofthe Unifiers 845
JURGIS S. A. ELISONAS
Oda Nobunaga 849
The Assault on Mount Hiei and the Blessings of Nobunaga 849
Nobunaga in Echizen 850
Letters from the Battleground 850
Nobunaga in Azuchi 851
The Proud Tower 851
The Free Market of Azuchi 852
Toyotomi Hideyoshi 854
Domestic Policies 854
The Disarmament ofthe Populace 854
Restrictions on Change of Status 856
The Laws and Regulations ofthe Taikö 857
The Korean War 859
Letter to the King of Korea 859
Keinen: Korea Day by Day 860
Bibliograph)? 863
Index 875
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author_GND | (DE-588)121611108 |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV037473688 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)637379108 (DE-599)BVBBV037473688 |
dewey-full | 950 |
dewey-hundreds | 900 - History & geography |
dewey-ones | 950 - History of Asia |
dewey-raw | 950 |
dewey-search | 950 |
dewey-sort | 3950 |
dewey-tens | 950 - History of Asia |
discipline | Geschichte |
format | Book |
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illustrated | Not Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T23:24:56Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780231143042 9780231143059 |
language | English |
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physical | XXIV, 909 S. |
publishDate | 2008 |
publishDateSearch | 2008 |
publishDateSort | 2008 |
publisher | Columbia Univ. Press |
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series2 | Introduction to Asian civilizations |
spelling | Sources of East Asian tradition 1 Premodern Asia ed. by Wm. Theodore de Bary. With the collaboration of Irene Bloom ... New York Columbia Univ. Press 2008 XXIV, 909 S. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Introduction to Asian civilizations De Bary, William Theodore 1919-2017 Sonstige (DE-588)121611108 oth (DE-604)BV037473677 1 HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=022625381&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Sources of East Asian tradition |
title | Sources of East Asian tradition |
title_auth | Sources of East Asian tradition |
title_exact_search | Sources of East Asian tradition |
title_full | Sources of East Asian tradition 1 Premodern Asia ed. by Wm. Theodore de Bary. With the collaboration of Irene Bloom ... |
title_fullStr | Sources of East Asian tradition 1 Premodern Asia ed. by Wm. Theodore de Bary. With the collaboration of Irene Bloom ... |
title_full_unstemmed | Sources of East Asian tradition 1 Premodern Asia ed. by Wm. Theodore de Bary. With the collaboration of Irene Bloom ... |
title_short | Sources of East Asian tradition |
title_sort | sources of east asian tradition premodern asia |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=022625381&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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