lundi 22 mars 2010

Buddhism Is Not What You Think: Finding Freedom Beyond Beliefs | La Selection du mois

Cet ouvrage a été commis par Steve Hagen, un des  héritiers de Dainin Katagiri-roshi. Il est actuellement responsable des enseignements auprès de la communauté « Dharma Field Zen Center in Minneapolis ». Au sujet de cet auteur, reportez-vous à l’interview – en anglais - qu’il a donné sur le thème « The Wisdom of Seeing ». http://goo.gl/YJWq

Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly

Zen Buddhist priest and longtime teacher Hagen makes his central point emphatically and repeatedly throughout this book: Buddhism is about direct experience, not about the thoughts people habitually entertain about experience.
A student of Japanese Zen master Dainin Katagiri authorized by his master to teach, Hagen cites the Buddha's one-word summary of the goal of Buddhist teachings: awareness-awareness of whatever is taking place in the ever-changing present moment. Hagen's Buddhism is oriented toward big questions, strongly ontological and epistemological, and concerned with reality and how reality is ordinarily perceived (or, as he argues, habitually misperceived, because it is overlain with hopes, desires, concepts and other delusions).
So the author is not given to a lot of specific examples or stories from present life, though the book is peppered with the ancient-master stories that Zen teachers always draw on. The tone of the book is strongly didactic and abstract.
Unlike Zen writers given to simplicity or poetry or startling paradox, Hagen relies on typographical conventions-italics and capital letters-to articulate and underscore his central point about Buddhist awareness ("to see Reality"), which contributes to a ponderous tone.

His Zen exegesis of Emily Dickinson is provocative, and the book would have benefited from more such surprises and re-readings of the lessons of everyday experience. That Hagen isn't a poet of prose doesn't detract from the worth of his content, but it does make his book harder to read.

“This is not just another nice book about Buddhism, one telling us what we like to hear and are used to hearing. No--it is a clear and challenging showing of the fundamental truth of our lives. This is an exceptional book. Make good use of it.” (Charlotte Joko Beck author of Everyday Zen )

Paperback: 272 pages
Publisher: HarperOne (September 7, 2004)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0060730579
ISBN-13: 978-0060730574