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Zen Culture

Chapter 42: Fiction
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About This Book

This book surveys the origins and development of Zen and shows how its aesthetic principles shaped many arts and everyday practices. It traces how simplicity, asymmetry, natural materials, and an emphasis on direct perception appear in ceramics, ink painting, calligraphy, architecture, garden design, the tea ceremony, theater, poetry, flower arranging, and martial disciplines. The author combines historical overview with close descriptions of representative forms and techniques, highlighting restraint, intuitive perception, and a celebration of ordinary objects. Final chapters draw parallels between traditional Zen sensibilities and modern design tendencies and encourage attention to sensory experience over analytic explanation.

Yayoi: pre-Buddhist culture in Japan.

Yoshimasa (1435-1490): Ashikaga shogun and staunch patron of Zen arts.

Yoshimitsu (1358-1408): Ashikaga shogun whose patronage

sparked the classic era of Zen culture.

yugen: most important term in Zen aesthetic vocabulary, meaning

among other things that which is mysterious or profound.

zazen: meditation, a mainstay of the Soto sect of Japanese Zen. zenkiga: style of Zen painting.

 

 

BOOKS BY THOMAS HOOVER

 

Nonfiction

 

Zen Culture

The Zen Experience

 

Fiction

 

The Moghul

Caribbee

Wall Street Samurai

     (The Samurai Strategy)

Project Daedalus

Project Cyclops

Life Blood

Syndrome

 

All free as e-books at

www.thomashoover.info