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Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki (1870–1966)

Autor von Die große Befreiung

145+ Werke 6,039 Mitglieder 64 Rezensionen Lieblingsautor von 11 Lesern

Über den Autor

A student of the Zen master Shaku Soen, who addressed the 1893 World's Parliament of Religions held in Chicago, D. T. Suzuki did more to introduce Zen to Westerners than any other representative of that tradition. Shaku Soen sent the young Suzuki to America in 1897 to help Paul Carus translate the mehr anzeigen Chinese text the Dao De Jing. Suzuki remained in America for about a decade, working at Carus' Open Court Publishing Company outside Chicago. After Suzuki returned to Japan, he married an American woman, Beatrice Lane, in 1911, and they began publishing an English journal, The Eastern Buddhist, in 1921. During this time in Japan, Suzuki translated into Japanese a number of Swedenborgian texts. He traveled to China in 1934, and he went to London in 1936 to attend the World Congress of Faiths. Suzuki recognized that the West had much to offer the East, but like Swami Vivekananda, he was convinced that the East had much to offer the West in its religion and philosophy. On this basis he was motivated to write about Zen in English. Suzuki wrote about 30 books in English and many more in Japanese. Suzuki's first books in English were a translation of Ashvaghosha's Discourse on the Awakening of Faith in the Mahayana (1900) and Outlines of Mahayana Buddhism (1907). A practitioner of Rinzai Zen Buddhism, Suzuki, in his writings about the ultimate experience of satori and the meditative use of koans, made Zen terms almost household words in the United States. In the early part of the twentieth century, Suzuki devoted himself to the propagation of Zen via his writings. After World War II he became a noted lecturer on Zen at American and European universities. That Suzuki's work was effective can be seen in the fact that Zen was picked up in the 1950s by California beatniks, producing what was termed Beat Zen. From that time on, Americans increasingly began to go to Japan to study Zen, and more Zen masters began to come to the United States to teach. The earliest institutions devoted to the practice of Zen in America were established in San Francisco in 1928, in Los Angeles in 1929, and in New York City in 1931. Zen centers remain an important part of the American urban scene, and several of them have established rural Zen retreat centers. (Bowker Author Biography) weniger anzeigen
Bildnachweis: Mihoko Okamura

Reihen

Werke von Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki

Die große Befreiung (1954) 1,116 Exemplare
Zen und die Kultur Japans (1938) 683 Exemplare
Manual of Zen Buddhism (1934) 514 Exemplare
Zen-Buddhismus und Psychoanalyse (1960) 393 Exemplare
Studies in Zen (1955) 98 Exemplare
Buddha of Infinite Light (1998) 94 Exemplare
The Awakening of Zen (1669) 87 Exemplare
Outlines of Mahayana Buddhism (1907) 83 Exemplare
Lankavatara Sutra (1983) — Übersetzer — 59 Exemplare
Sengai, the Zen master (1971) 55 Exemplare
On Indian Mahayana Buddhism (1968) 49 Exemplare
The field of Zen (1969) 47 Exemplare
Shin Buddhism (1970) 36 Exemplare
Zen and Japanese Buddhism (1777) 34 Exemplare
The Essence of Buddhism (1948) 16 Exemplare
Vivir El Zen (1995) 13 Exemplare
Selected Works of D.T. Suzuki, Volume I Zen (2014) — Autor — 12 Exemplare
The Zen Monk's Life (1965) 12 Exemplare
Japanese Buddhism (1938) 10 Exemplare
Budismo Zen (1996) 9 Exemplare
Wprowadzenie do buddyzmu zen (1998) 8 Exemplare
The Chain of Compassion (1966) 7 Exemplare
La gran liberación (1992) 5 Exemplare
Zen and the Samurai (1995) 4 Exemplare
Lo zen e la cultura giapponese (2014) 4 Exemplare
Vivere zen (1996) 4 Exemplare
El ámbito del zen (1981) 4 Exemplare
Zen (1958) 4 Exemplare
Les chemins du zen (1990) 3 Exemplare
Discorsi sullo zen (1981) 3 Exemplare
Sengai (1966) 3 Exemplare
Zen and the Art of Tea (1995) 3 Exemplare
Zen i kultura japońska (2009) 3 Exemplare
Japanese Spirituality (1988) 3 Exemplare
禅 (ちくま文庫) (1987) 2 Exemplare
Sengai Calendar, 1964 (1963) 2 Exemplare
Essence Of Buddhism 2 Exemplare
Field of Zen 2 Exemplare
Zen und die Kultur Japans (1941) 2 Exemplare
Leben aus ZEN. (1982) 2 Exemplare
Que Es El Zen? (2013) 1 Exemplar
The Field of Zen 1 Exemplar
Zen i japanska kultura (2016) 1 Exemplar
Zen Buddhism 1 Exemplar
禅学入門 (2004) 1 Exemplar
禅学への道 (2003) 1 Exemplar
Practica del monje zen, la (1901) 1 Exemplar
Il risveglio dello zen (1982) 1 Exemplar
Sengai, 1750-1837 — Autor — 1 Exemplar
The Field of Zen 1 Exemplar
Myokonin 1 Exemplar
ZEN I SAMURAJI (1992) 1 Exemplar

Zugehörige Werke

Zen in der Kunst des Bogenschießens (1948) — Einführung, einige Ausgaben2,509 Exemplare
The Range of Philosophy: Introductory Readings (1964) — Mitwirkender — 53 Exemplare
New Knowledge in Human Values (1959) — Mitwirkender — 30 Exemplare
A Zen Life (2006) — Features — 6 Exemplare
What is Zen? (2002) — Author biography — 3 Exemplare

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Wissenswertes

Rechtmäßiger Name
貞太郎, 鈴木
Andere Namen
Suzuki, D. T.
Geburtstag
1870-10-18
Todestag
1966-07-22
Geschlecht
male
Nationalität
Japan
Geburtsort
Kanazawa, Ishikawa Prefecture, Japan
Wohnorte
Kanazawa, Ishikawa Prefecture, Japan (birth)
La Salle, Illinois, USA
Ausbildung
Tokyo University
Berufe
Professor of Buddhist philosophy
translator
Beziehungen
Suzuki, Beatrice Lane (wife)
Nishida, Kitaro (friend)
Yanagi, Muneyoshi (student)
Organisationen
Otani University
Kurzbiographie
Daisetsu Teitaro Suzuki (1870-1966) est un auteur japonais d'ouvrages et d'essais sur le Bouddhisme Zen.
Il fut aussi un traduteur prolifique du chinois, du japonais et de la littérature sanscrite. Il donna de nombreux cours et conférences dans les universités occidentales et fut professeur à l’université d’Otani, une école bouddhiste japonaise.
Parmi ses ouvrages traduits : Essais sur le Bouddhisme Zen, séries I, II, III, Albin Michel (1940-2003) ;
Introduction au Bouddhisme Zen (Préface de C.G. Jung, 24 pages), Buchet/Chastel, 1978 ; Le non-mental selon la pensée zen (traduit par Hubert Benoit), Le Courrier du Livre, 1970.

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Rezensionen

> Babelio : https://www.babelio.com/livres/Daisetz-Teitaro-Suzuki-Les-chemins-du-zen/650380

> RÉSUMÉ. — Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki, l'auteur des célèbres et désormais classiques Essais sur le bouddhisme zen, joua un rôle déterminant dans l'enseignement du bouddhisme en Occident. Ici regroupés, ses articles et conférences - dont une, très émouvante, sur le "Suprême Idéal Spirituel" éclairent le bouddhisme Mahayana en général et l'école zen en particulier, ainsi que les paroles de maître Rinzaï et les relations entre zen et psychologie occidentale. De plus, le Dr Suzuki s'y montre tout autant expert de la culture et de l'art japonais que fin observateur de l'évolution des valeurs au cours de notre XXe siècle.… (mehr)
 
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Joop-le-philosophe | Jan 31, 2024 |
‘An absolute affirmation must rise from the fiery crater of life itself.’

I liked the bit where, just to make a point, a Zen master cut a cat in half because a couple of the fellas couldn’t decide which side of the Monastery it should belong to. At least we’re reassured by Suzuki that the cat is surely on its way to Buddhahood.... I wonder where that cat is now.
 
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theoaustin | 8 weitere Rezensionen | May 19, 2023 |
Of all the many sects of Buddhism, it is Zen, with its roots so deeply embedded in the soul of Japanese history, that has made the most vivid and enduring impression upon the character and culture of Japan, and has also most aroused the interest of the West. And yet, with its teaching of its 'vast emptiness,' its 'satori-awakening,' and its riddle-like 'koan,' Zen is probably the most difficult of all Buddhist beliefs to interpret. Certainly only such an author as Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki, the world's leading authority on Zen, could have achieved what he so successfully does achieve in the few pages of the this book, which is a distillation of his profouund knowledge of the subject: a masterly and easily understod summation of this seemilnly yet profoundly religion. The aim of Zen, explains, the author, is to discard all the external impedimenta with which the intellect seeks to weigh down the soul, and to see directly into the inmost nature of man's being. He shows how this is accomplished through Zen practice and, in explaining Zen monastery life, makes clear the important role that manual labor and alms begging play in the eventual liberation of the mind-body. Tracing the history of Zen from its beginnings in India and China to its full flowering in Japan, he presents many short Zen stories and episodes to illustrate the central tenets of this teaching. In the later part of the book the author treats of the history and characteristics of Japanese Buddhism in general, elucidating one of the world's most vital religions and making clear the place of Zen within this larger whole. Lending added interest to the excellent text are numerous photographs concerning Zen and Buddhism. The series showing life in a Zen monastery, taken especially for this book, well illustrates the role of simplicity and austerity in Zen. About the author Zen Buddhism has of recent years been arousing the keenest of interest both ithe United States and Europe. And it is the author of the present volume, Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki, who has contributed greatly to ths Western awakening to one of the Orient's ancient and profuound religions. Now nearly ninety, the author is certainly the most celebrated and eloquent interpreter of Zen anywhere in the world. After teaching at several of Japan's leadng universities, he enlarged his acivites to a truly international scale. Beginning with a visit to Great Britain in 1936 as an exchange professor, he has lectured at various universities in America and Europe. He has also written more that a hundred works on Zen and Buddhism both in Japanese and in Englilsh, and a number of these works have been translated into other Western languages. Recent books in English include Introduction to Zen Buddhism: Living by Zen; Manual of Zen Buddhism; Studies in Zen Buddhism; Zen Buddhism; Mysticism: Christian and Buddhist. While a young man, the author lived as a lay Buddhist disciple i the Engakuji, Kamakura's great Zen monastery. After diligent and strenuous training, he experienced satori-awakening and received from his master, the renowned Shaku Soyen, the Zen name of 'Daisetz' in recognition of is attainment of Zen understanding. For his outstanding contributions in the field of religion and in the promotion of Japanese culture abroad he was decorated by the Emperor of Japan in 1949 with the Cultural Medal and was elected as a member of the Academy of Japan. In 1954 he was the Asahi Cultural Prize. Japan Travel Bureau: Publishers Tokyo, Japan. Charles E. Tuttle Company: Distributors Tokyo, Japan & Rutland, Vermont Contents Preface Part One Zen Buddhism I What is Zen? Not Dhyana but Prajna II The development of Zen III Schools of Zen IV The Satori-experience V Heaven, nature, emptiness VI The training in Zen Part Two Japanese Buddhism I The two main schools of Buddhism II The development of Japanese Buddhism III Some einent persons in Japanese Buddhism IV Buddhism and Japanese culture Suggestions for further reading Index… (mehr)
 
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AikiBib | 1 weitere Rezension | Apr 1, 2023 |
La relacion existente entre el budismo zen y el psicoanalisis es el centro de esta recopilacion de textos de D.T. Suzuki y Erich Fromm. Este libro es testigo de un dialogo entre dos tradiciones distintas: Oriente y Occidente, budismo zen y psicoanalisis, entablan una enriquecedora conversacion en la que senalan sus intereses comunes en el tratamiento de problemas de los seres humanos.
 
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Natt90 | 5 weitere Rezensionen | Jan 17, 2023 |

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