Читать книгу Zen Gardens and Temples of Kyoto - John Dougill - Страница 4
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PART ONE
Zen and Japanese Culture
Preface by Reverend Takafumi Kawakami
A National Treasure: Kyoto and the Art of Zen
From China to Kyoto: The Story of Zen Buddhism
Eat, Sit, Sleep: The Daily routine of a Zen Monk
Finding One’s Way: The Design of a Zen Monastery
Visions of Serenity: The Zen garden
Sipping Zen: The Japanese Tea Ceremony
The Sound of Zen: The Shakuhachi Flute as Spiritual Instrument
The Taste of Zen: Kyoto Temple Cuisine
Picturing Zen: Temple Painting and Brushwork
Capturing the Moment: Haiku and Zen Poetry
The Discipline of No-Mind: Zen and the Martial Arts
Map of Kyoto
PART TWO
Kyoto’s Zen Temples (In chronological order)
Kennin-ji
Entoku-in
Kodai-ji
Kosho-ji
Tofuku-ji
Funda-in (Sesshu-ji)
Reiun-in
Komyo-in
Nanzen-ji
Nanzen-in
Tenju-an
Konchi-in
Daitoku-ji
Ryogen-in
Daisen-in
Zuiho-in
Koto-in
Myoshin-ji
Taizo-in
Shunko-in
Tenryu-ji
Toji-in
Saiho-ji (Kokedera)
Genko-an
Shokoku-ji
Kinkaku-ji
Ginkaku-ji
Ryoan-ji
Shuon-an (Ikkyu-ji)
Enko-ji
Shisendo
Manpuku-ji
Kanga-an
Entsu-ji
Konpuku-ji
Acknowledgments and Credits
Author’s Note
Names are written in Japanese fashion (family name before given name), except for contemporary and modern figures who are referred to in the Western style.
Baisao, the legendary Edo-era tea seller, was a poet and Obaku monk who is enshrined at Manpuku-ji. Painting by Ito Jakuchu.