000 | 01953nam a2200277 4500 | ||
---|---|---|---|
999 |
_c2000 _d2000 |
||
003 | OSt | ||
008 | 181010b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d | ||
040 | _cSILC | ||
041 |
_ajpn _achi _beng _hjpn _jeng |
||
046 | _k2009 | ||
050 |
_aPN1997 _b.Z460 2009 |
||
100 | _aBanmei Takahashi | ||
245 |
_aZen _cBanmei Takahashi _h[videorecording]= |
||
260 |
_aJapan _bKadokawa Pictures _bTwins Japan _c2009 |
||
300 |
_a1 videodisc (ca. 127 min.) _bsound, color. _c4 3/4 in. |
||
500 | _aSpecial feature includes: - The Zen of Dogen with Kazuaki Tanahashi editor of the new complete Shobo Genzo | ||
520 | _aFrom case cover: Zen is the inspiring true story of Eihei Dogen, the great 13th century Japanese Buddhist master. Dogen studied in China and established a monastic practice which emphasizes sitting meditation; he is regarded as the founder of the Soto school of Zen. From pilgrimages to China to armed monks at war, the Kamakura Era was a time of upheaval in Japan and saw the beginnings of both the Rinzai and Soto schools of Zen, and the arrival of tea. The country would never be the same again. Born in 1200, orphaned at eight, and initiated as a monk at age fourteen, Dogen is perhaps best known in the west for his texts Instructions to the Cook and a collection of discourses called the Shobo Genzo. He led a renaissance in practice and doctrine in Japan, and his Zen is the practical implementation of the principle of non-duality. Two key points are: there is no gap between practice and enlightenment; and, right behavior in daily life is Buddhism itself. | ||
538 | _aDVD video; Dolby Digital 2.0; stereo; NTSC; Regions 1-6,8; 16:9 widescreen. | ||
546 | _aJapanese and Chinese audio with English subtitles. | ||
700 |
_aBanmei Takahashi _eDirector _eWriter |
||
700 |
_aTetsuo Ôtani _eAuthor |
||
700 |
_aKankurô Nakamura _eActor |
||
700 |
_aYuki Uchida _eActor |
||
700 |
_aRyushin Tei _eActor |
||
942 |
_2lcc _cDVD |