Commentary on the Song of Awakening: A Twentieth Century Japanese Zen Master's Commentary on the Seventh Century Poem by the Chinese Ch'an Master Yung-chia Hsuan-chueh
The Song of Awakening (chin. Cheng-tao ke, jap. Shōdōka), is a seminal text within early Chinese Chan (jap. Zen). Written in the seventh century by the Chinese master Yung-chia Hsüan-chüeh (Jap. Yōka Genkaku, known familiarly as Yōka Daishi), this superb poem resonates with Yōka Daishi’s great awakening to the truth of reality. As such, it has had a deep influence on the understanding and practice of a long line of Chinese and Japanese Zen masters and practitioners.

Kōdō Sawaki uses the poetic expression of Shōdōka as a springboard for a wide-ranging commentary that not only elucidates the poem, but adds a rich background of Buddhist teachings and emphasizes Sawaki Roshi’s focus on upright sitting in the zazen posture as the seat of realization. Filled with humor, Japanese folk history, and sometimes a no-holds barred critique of academic and priestly posturing, Sawaki’s commentary is a pleasure to encounter.

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Commentary on the Song of Awakening: A Twentieth Century Japanese Zen Master's Commentary on the Seventh Century Poem by the Chinese Ch'an Master Yung-chia Hsuan-chueh
The Song of Awakening (chin. Cheng-tao ke, jap. Shōdōka), is a seminal text within early Chinese Chan (jap. Zen). Written in the seventh century by the Chinese master Yung-chia Hsüan-chüeh (Jap. Yōka Genkaku, known familiarly as Yōka Daishi), this superb poem resonates with Yōka Daishi’s great awakening to the truth of reality. As such, it has had a deep influence on the understanding and practice of a long line of Chinese and Japanese Zen masters and practitioners.

Kōdō Sawaki uses the poetic expression of Shōdōka as a springboard for a wide-ranging commentary that not only elucidates the poem, but adds a rich background of Buddhist teachings and emphasizes Sawaki Roshi’s focus on upright sitting in the zazen posture as the seat of realization. Filled with humor, Japanese folk history, and sometimes a no-holds barred critique of academic and priestly posturing, Sawaki’s commentary is a pleasure to encounter.

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Commentary on the Song of Awakening: A Twentieth Century Japanese Zen Master's Commentary on the Seventh Century Poem by the Chinese Ch'an Master Yung-chia Hsuan-chueh

Commentary on the Song of Awakening: A Twentieth Century Japanese Zen Master's Commentary on the Seventh Century Poem by the Chinese Ch'an Master Yung-chia Hsuan-chueh

Commentary on the Song of Awakening: A Twentieth Century Japanese Zen Master's Commentary on the Seventh Century Poem by the Chinese Ch'an Master Yung-chia Hsuan-chueh

Commentary on the Song of Awakening: A Twentieth Century Japanese Zen Master's Commentary on the Seventh Century Poem by the Chinese Ch'an Master Yung-chia Hsuan-chueh

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Overview

The Song of Awakening (chin. Cheng-tao ke, jap. Shōdōka), is a seminal text within early Chinese Chan (jap. Zen). Written in the seventh century by the Chinese master Yung-chia Hsüan-chüeh (Jap. Yōka Genkaku, known familiarly as Yōka Daishi), this superb poem resonates with Yōka Daishi’s great awakening to the truth of reality. As such, it has had a deep influence on the understanding and practice of a long line of Chinese and Japanese Zen masters and practitioners.

Kōdō Sawaki uses the poetic expression of Shōdōka as a springboard for a wide-ranging commentary that not only elucidates the poem, but adds a rich background of Buddhist teachings and emphasizes Sawaki Roshi’s focus on upright sitting in the zazen posture as the seat of realization. Filled with humor, Japanese folk history, and sometimes a no-holds barred critique of academic and priestly posturing, Sawaki’s commentary is a pleasure to encounter.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781937385620
Publisher: MerwinAsia
Publication date: 03/31/2015
Pages: 185
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.10(h) x 1.20(d)

About the Author

Sawaki Roshi has had a great influence on Western Zen practice through the teachings of his students Taisen Deshimaru and Gudo Nishijima, as well as those of his dharma heir, Kōshō Uchiyama Roshi and his dharma heir, Shōhaku Okumura, yet Sawaki’s own teaching has rarely been translated into English. The Song of Awakening opens the door into an understanding of both a great seventh century Chan master and a great twentieth century Zen master. It offers inspiration for the reader’s personal encounter with zazen.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments vii

Foreword ix

Preface xiv

Information on Forms Used xvii

Biographical Note on Kodo Sawaki xix

Introduction Kodo Sawaki xxiii

Kodo Sawaki's Biographical Notes on Yoka Daishi xxx

Notes on Sawaki's Introduction and Yoka Daishi's Biography xxxv

The Song of Awakening 1

Commentary by Kodo Sawaki 16

Notes On Sawaki's Commentary 304

Disciples of Kodo Sawaki with Great Influence in the West 354

Suggested Reading 357

Table of Kodo Sawaki's Commentaries 360

About the Translator 365

What People are Saying About This

Brad Warner

[Sawaki] never makes his readers feel like they need any sort of academic knowledge to understand the core points of Zen practice. Tonen O'Connor has done an amazing job of producing an accessible and entertaining translation. Highly recommended!!

Jisho Warner

One of the greatest voices of twentieth-century Japanese Zen can finally be heard on our Western shores, speaking directly to each of us about our inmost intention and all the illusions we pile on top of it. Kōdō Sawaki’s iconoclastic mind is matched by the poem he is writing about: The Song of Awakening is a great and edgy classic of early Chinese Zen. Together they are a provocative and exciting read, brightly lit by the clarity of Tonen O’Connor’s translation.

Shohaku Okumura

Kōdō Sawaki Roshi was one of the most important Soto Zen Masters of the 20th century. For nearly half a century, his teaching activities at monasteries, temples, Komazawa University and other places, including both priests and lay practitioners, made Sōtō Zen practice and Dōgen Zenji’s teachings widely available . . . It is exciting to read Sawaki Roshi’s teisho in English, an historic publication as we approach the 50th anniversary of his death.

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