 408 pp. February 2001
cloth, ISBN 978-0-8248-2231-6, $51.00
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Keywords: |
Asia China history religion Buddhism biography |
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Toward a Modern Chinese Buddhism: Taixu's Reforms
by Don A. Pittman
"Filled with useful information back by careful research and sophisticated analysis" --Journal of Asian Studies, February 2004 "This stimulating book-length treatment of Taixu, with its extensive quotations from original sources, is must-reading for anyone interested in contemporary Chinese Buddhism.... The author's use of comparative concepts in religious studies makes this book accessible to a broader audience interested in religious-reform movements, cultural encounters between different traditions, and the 'modernizing' of 'traditional' institutions." --China Review International, Spring 2002
The Venerable Master Taixu (1890–1947) is the most important and controversial Chinese Buddhist reformer of the twentieth century. Viewed as dangerously rash by conservative Buddhists, irrelevant by secular humanists, and spiritually misguided by Christian missionaries, Taixu was nevertheless committed to forging a socially engaged form of Buddhism and to organizing a Buddhist mission in the West. His bold and inventive “Buddhist revolution” continues to shape aspects of a revitalized Buddhism in East Asia and around the world. The present volume is the first major study in English to focus on the charismatic reformer and his teachings and provides a comprehensive and absorbing interpretation of Taixu’s aims and the divisive controversies that surrounded him. This nuanced work is richly documented with quotations from Taixu’s own writings and from various Chinese intellectuals and evangelists of the period. As the most politically involved of all the Buddhist leaders in the Republican period, Taixu sought to present Mahâyâna Buddhism as the core of a new Chinese culture and the only adequate foundation for a truly global civilization. Distancing himself from those masters who focused on otherworldly paradises and stressed dependence on celestial buddhas and bodhisattvas, he emphasized what could actually be accomplished in this world through the work of thousands of living bodhisattvas dedicated to building a pure land here and now. A realist who acknowledged the complexities of the human condition in an increasingly interdependent and violent world, Taixu was also a utopian who tried to imagine how Buddhists could begin to realize their ultimate ideals—ideals that in fact lay beyond the preservation of institutional Buddhism itself. Students of Buddhism, Chinese religion, contemporary Chinese history and culture, and Taiwan studies will welcome this study of a crucially important and intriguingly complex individual whose life encapsulates many of the forces and possibilities apparent within Chinese Buddhism in the contemporary world.
Don A. Pittman is dean and professor of history of religion at Phillips Theological Seminary in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
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