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Monks, Rulers, and Literati: The Political Ascendancy of Chan Buddhism
 
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Monks, Rulers, and Literati: The Political Ascendancy of Chan Buddhism [Hardcover]

Albert Welter (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

February 9, 2006 0195175212 978-0195175219
The Chan (Zen in Japanese) school began when, in seventh-century China, a small religious community gathered around a Buddhist monk named Hongren. Over the centuries, Chan Buddhism grew from an obscure movement to an officially recognized and eventually dominant form of Buddhism in China and throughout East Asia. It has reached international popularity, its teachings disseminated across cultures far and wide.
In Monks, Rulers, and Literati, Albert Welter presents, for the first time in a comprehensive fashion in a Western work, the story of the rise of Chan, a story which has been obscured by myths about Zen. Zen apologists in the twentieth century, Welter argues, sold the world on the story of Zen as a transcendental spiritualism untainted by political and institutional involvements. In fact, Welter shows that the opposite is true: relationships between Chan monks and political rulers were crucial to Chan's success. The book concentrates on an important but neglected period of Chan history, the 10th and 11th centuries, when monks and rulers created the so-called Chan "golden age" and the classic principles of Chan identity. Placing Chan's ascendancy into historical context, Welter analyzes the social and political factors that facilitated Chan's success as a movement. He then examines how this success was represented in the Chan narrative and the aims of those who shaped it.
Monks, Rulers, and Literati recovers a critical period of Zen's past, deepening our understanding of how the movement came to flourish. Welter's groundbreaking work is not only the most comprehensive history of the dominant strand of East Asian Buddhism, but also an important corrective to many of the stereotypes about Zen.

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Editorial Reviews

Review


"Welter's Monks, Rulers, and Literati is a much needed and very readable work that presents a rich and multifaceted picture of the development of Chan and significantly advances our understanding of it. It is a must-read for every scholar interested in Chinese Buddhism. I will also be highly useful in graduate seminars and even in upper-level undergraduate courses."--Journal of Chinese Religions


Albert Welter's Monks, Rulers, and Literati critically examines the formation of Chan transmission records (denglu) that were produced in the Song period. By demonstrating the degree to which the Chan narrative was shaped by considerations of court and literati patronage, his analysis lays bare the process by which the Chan tradition constructed some of its central myths. His study joins a distinguished list of critical studies that open a window on the historical reality of the Chan tradition.--Daniel A. Getz, Jr., co-editor of Buddhism in the Sung


"This is a fascinating and very important study of the history of the development of the Chan/Zen monastic institution as seen through a careful reading of the denglu or "transmission records." While other books have examined the institution or the literary texts of Chan, this is the very first work in English to provide a socio-political historical account based on a group of writings that is crucial for understanding how Chan Buddhism took hold and became the dominant religious movement in the Song dynasty. Welter explores in detail which monks were responsible for the spread and how and why they garnered support from public officials and literati, and clarifies the boundary line between mythical narrative and factual history presented in the records. Anybody interested in role of Chan/Zen in Chinese society will want to read and digest the contents of this book."--Steven Heine, author of Opening a Mountain: Koans of the Zen Masters


About the Author


Albert Welter is Professor of Asian Religions at the University of Winnipeg in Canada. He is the author of The Meaning of Myriad Good Deeds: A Study of Yung-Ming Yen-Shou and the Wan-Shan T'ung-Kuei Chi (1994).

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 334 pages
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA (February 9, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0195175212
  • ISBN-13: 978-0195175219
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.3 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,272,212 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Scientific historical scholarship comes to Zen studies, January 13, 2008
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This review is from: Monks, Rulers, and Literati: The Political Ascendancy of Chan Buddhism (Hardcover)
It was bound to happen. Just as studies of the New Testament based on scientific historical scholarship transformed the field of Bible studies, so now it is transforming Zen studies. The same kind of critical scholarship that can be seen in Elaine Pagels' The Origin of Satan: How Christians Demonized Jews, Pagans, and Heretics to help understand how the construction of New Testament Gospel texts were shaped by historical events in the years following the death of Jesus has now been used to illuminate the rise of Chan Buddhism.

This is a outsider approach to Chan Buddhist history as opposed to the insider approach used by Heinrich Duomoulin in Zen Buddhism: A History : India and China With a New Supplement on the Northern School of Chinese Zen (Nanzan Studies in Religion and Culture). It doesn't blindly accept what the Zen texts say but reviews them in light of other historical information. In doing so, it suggests possible motives for what is written.

Welter worked with historical documents heavily including the Chan transmission records. He looked at connections between Chan Buddhist leaders and Chinese political leaders, who provided key support to the Chan Buddhists. He shows how in the time from the Tang to the Song dynasty, Chan was able to gain dominance in China by presenting itself as iconoclastic, spontaneous and not dependent on doctrine and texts, all the while working closely with Chinese political leaders as it sold its story via the careful construction of its transmission records. Basing its appeal heavily on dharma transmissions, Chan tweaked history so as to construct first multi-lineage tranmissions which, over time, were reduced to a single lineage as the Linji school gained dominance. The prominance of Northern Chan Buddhism was challenged sucessfully by the Southern School, as documented by the Southern School in the The Platform Sutra of the Sixth Patriarch. Records of transmission became a tool within lineage to pass control from one master to another.

During the Song Dynansty, Chan was able to present itself as a new kind of Chinese Buddhism, free of the perceived failure of Buddhism during the Tang Dynasty. While claiming to be free of reliance on text, it relied heavily on transmission records. The koan collections (some major ones are The Blue Cliff Record, No Barrier: Unlocking the Zen Koan - A New Translation of the Zen Classic "Wumenguan" (Mumonkan) and The Book of Serenity: One Hundred Zen Dialogues) that derived from these records were a unique literary production that seemed, unlike that of other Buddhist schools, somehow free of doctrine and narration ... and above all seemed spontaneous. Actually, as the historical records Welter examines reveals, they derived from considerable institutional and political influences. Chan's status as a "separate practice outside the teachings" was a creative solution to unify Chan branches which otherwise, like other Buddhist schools, might have appeared as just so many variations requiring a resort to the "time-honored" Buddhist appeal to "skillful means" to pull together. Although carefully constructed, stories of iconoclastic practices including beating and shouting were ideally suited to appeal to the religious longings of a Chinese elite increasingly caught up in bureaucratic activity.

What then of enlightenment? Was it simply a way of designating the passage of authority from one Buddhist leader to another? Such a suspicion might indeed explain the puzzling instant moments of awakening found in the transmission records. Like the Christian story of a physical resurrection, Chan stories of enlightenment might be just that, stories less intended to awaken an individual Chan practitioner than to pass control from one leader of a monastery to another, monasteries that depended on government support.

Just as the application of scientific scholarship to Christianity has enriched our understanding of how human beings construct and find meaning in a religion, so hopefully its application to Chan Buddhism will free us of misguided submission to false authority and the manipulation of "enlightenment" so that we may find the real value in Chan we may have otherwise overlooked. Ironically, as Welter points out, Chan may not have survived were it not for its political entanglements.

With eyes open, Chan practice still seems powerful, for which try Sheng Yen's Hoofprint of the Ox: Principles of the Chan Buddhist Path as Taught by a Modern Chinese Master.

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