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My Heart Sutra: A World in 260 Characters Paperback – December 15, 2020
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Frederik L. Schodt
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Print length248 pages
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LanguageEnglish
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PublisherStone Bridge Press
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Publication dateDecember 15, 2020
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Dimensions4.75 x 0.55 x 6.75 inches
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ISBN-101611720621
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ISBN-13978-1611720624
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"Like the Heart Sutra itself, Schodt’s words are prismatic—stories of a lifetime of personal encounter with this ancient sacred text are set alongside historical, cultural, and linguistic commentary, each facet both intriguing in itself and an invitation to further inquiry."
—Lion's Roar
"The very personal nature of My Heart Sutra is what gives this book its readability, especially to the uninitiated."
—Books on Asia
"Schodt’s obsession with the sutra and expertise as a translator shows in his ability to decode academic conversations and practical religious concerns into accessible language.”
—Publishers Weekly
"Unique...an engaging read to anyone with the slightest interest in the subject."
—Nikkei Asia
"Schodt has found the Heart Sutra to be the most transformative spiritual influence in his life, and this book is his tribute for others to experience the scripture’s magic for themselves."
—teahouse.buddhistdoor.net
“This is not merely a book about the Heart Sutra. It’s about the stories that grew up around it, its journey through human civilization like a self-replicating meme, a scrap of wisdom whispering in temples, shopping malls, and movies.”
—Jonathan Clements, author of A Brief History of China
"Reading My Heart Sutra, I imagined pulling a loose thread at the end of a one-page sutra and unraveling enough yarn to weave together a life, with enough left to make a new robe for the Buddha."
—Red Pine, author of The Heart Sutra: The Womb of Buddhas
“Frederik Schodt has created a magical weaving of two stories of wonder: how the Heart Sutra arose from somewhat fantastic origins to become the most recognizable Buddhist scripture in China and Japan today through new forms of expression, and how the enigmatic teachings of this “sutra concerned with negating everything” has served as a kind of moving goalpost within the author, challenging, inspiring, and guiding him as his religious consciousness unfolds.”
—Mark L. Blum, professor of Buddhist Studies and Shinjo Ito distinguished chair in Japanese Studies, University of California, Berkeley; editor of Cultivating Spirituality, Rennyo and the Roots of Modern Japanese Buddhism, translator of The Nirvana Sutra, vol. 1
"I am not sure I have read another book in which the author is as sensitive as Schodt to the quality of the spoken or chanted version of [The Heart Sutra]."
—Leanne Ogasawara, Kyoto Journal
“Frederik L. Schodt skillfully weaves together personal anecdotes, details of Buddhist teaching and history, and many other facts and stories, giving readers a compelling reason to study the Heart Sutra and make the wisdom of Emptiness part of their lives."
—Daigaku Rummé, Sōtō Zen priest at the Confluence Zen Center St. Louis
"Schodt has found the Heart Sutra to be the most transformative spiritual influence in his life, and this book is his tribute for others to experience the scripture’s magic for themselves."
—teahouse.buddhistdoor.net
About the Author
Fluent in Japanese, Frederik L. Schodt is an author and translator of impressive breadth. He has written extensively on Japanese pop culture, technology, and history. His books include Dreamland Japan, America and the Four Japans, and Native American in the Land of the Shogun, which was a Choice Magazine Outstanding Academic Title in 2005. In 1998, Schodt translated and annotated Japanese immigrant Henry Kiyama's The Four Immigrants Manga, one of the first American original comic books; graphic novelist Will Eisner called the book "a treasure [that] belongs in every library."
In 2009, Schodt was awarded the prestigious Order of the Rising Sun, Gold Rays with Rosette, by the Japanese emperor for his contribution "to the introduction and promotion of Japanese contemporary popular culture in the United States of America. He is also a recipient of the Japan Foundation Award for 2017.
Schodt has lectured at venues worldwide, including San Francisco's Asian Art Museum, the Smithsonian Institution's Freer Art Gallery, Temple University Japan, the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, Tokyo University, Stanford University, and the University of California, Berkeley. He lives in San Francisco.
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Product details
- Publisher : Stone Bridge Press; Annotated edition (December 15, 2020)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 248 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1611720621
- ISBN-13 : 978-1611720624
- Item Weight : 8.8 ounces
- Dimensions : 4.75 x 0.55 x 6.75 inches
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Best Sellers Rank:
#704,437 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #5,456 in Eastern Philosophy (Books)
- #6,741 in Meditation (Books)
- #28,517 in Memoirs (Books)
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Customer reviews
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The Heart Sutra is a philosophical statement of such profundity and inscrutability that it’s been translated, recited and studied more than any of the hundreds of sutras (teachings of the Buddha). The author weaves engaging personal anecdotes with a history of Buddhism and its sutras, and an exploration of the Heart Sutra’s vast popularity in particular.
There is a fascinating history of the Heart Sutra’s most widely-accepted translation – the “master copy.” Schodt tells the story of a Chinese Buddhist monk named Xuangzang who, 1,400 years ago, traveled across China and India visiting sacred Buddhist sites. He returned home with hundreds of sutras and dedicated the remainder of his life translating them from Sanskrit. To ensure their preservation, Buddhist monks literally carved the sutras into stone (a stele with Xuangzang’s translation of the Heart Sutra was discovered in 2016).
Schodt approaches the subject from several additional angles, including a hotly-contested theory about provenance, the differences in how the same text can be read and spoken, and how the Heart Sutra manifests in different cultural environments. All of which adds up to piquing my interest for more.
Unlike many other books attempting to explain the Heart Sutra’s meaning, Schodt makes it clear that his book isn’t an attempt to provide insight beyond what it means to him; what he finds in himself when he recites the mantra. What he finds is objectively good, and something I suspect may be shared by many others – which is motivation enough for me to revisit Buddhist philosophy from an adult perspective, as I’m now spending more time reflecting than anticipating.
For those who are genuinely interested in understanding the Heart Sutra, this is a great book to start --- it provides translations and interpretations, and it discusses the reception of the sutra in different places and different times, including fierce unresolved scholarly and clerical debates over its ultimate meaning. However, the book is just as well suited for people who have some prior knowledge of the sutra (as I did) and who want to be taken on an intriguing journey through time and space that touches as much on the orthodox interpretation of the sutra as it does on its personal application and its lasting relevance to anyone who gets drawn under its spell. My Heart Sutra came out during the Corona-pandemic and for me, there could not be a more perfect book for this challenging time.