主动同情

IF 0.1 Q2 Arts and Humanities
Som Pourfarzaneh
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在美国和其他地方,禅宗(Chan)经常被定位为与日本和其他武术结合,如果不是同义词的话。这篇文章是对佛教的空虚和无我概念的批判性探索,因为它们与禅宗和武术有关,借鉴了莉拉·阿布·卢霍德的“特定民族志”来阐述作者作为柔术导师和佛教修行者的亲身经历。它提供了几种理解禅宗和武术可能同时相互矛盾和重申的方式,最后重新设想了如何将这两种不同的传统编织在一起,以造福自己和他人,这篇文章称之为“积极的同情”
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Active Compassion
In the United States and elsewhere, Zen (Chan) has often been positioned as coupled to, if not synonymous with, Japanese and other martial arts. This essay is a critical exploration of the Buddhist concepts of emptiness and no-self as they relate to Zen and martial arts, drawing upon Lila Abu-Lughod’s “ethnographies of the particular” to articulate the author’s own experience as a Jujutsu instructor and Buddhist practitioner. It offers several modes of understanding the ways in which Zen and the martial arts may be simultaneously incompatible with and reaffirming of one another, concluding with a re-envisioning of how the two diverse traditions may be woven together to benefit self and others in what the essay calls “active compassion.”
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来源期刊
自引率
0.00%
发文量
12
期刊介绍: The International Journal for the Study of New Religions considers submissions from both established scholars and research students from all over the world. Articles should be written for a general scholarly audience. All articles accepted by the editors are then peer-reviewed. International Journal for the Study of New Religions is published biannually in May and November. Each issue includes articles and a number of book reviews. The journal is published simultaneously in print and onlineThe language of publication is English, and submissions should be English.
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