Sarah J. Horton
Sarah J. Horton received her Ph.D. in Religious Studies from Yale University. She is a scholar of East Asian religions and Japanese culture. She is the author of Living Buddhist Statues in Medieval and Modern Japan (Palgrave MacMillan 2007)
Library Items
Record of the Transmission of Illumination by the Great Ancestor, Zen Master Keizan
The Denkōroku (Record of the Transmission of Illumination), together with Dogen Zenji's Shobogenzo (Treasury of the True Dharma Eye), is one of the fundamental texts of the Soto School. It is an exceptional record of the Zen ancestors that begins with Sakyamuni Buddha, extends through twenty-eight generations in India and twenty-three generations in China, and reaches to Dogen Zenji and Ejo Zenji. It provides instruction, in teisho format, about the causes and conditions whereby each awakened to the Way that was individually transmitted by the one Buddha and fifty-two ancestors. (Source: Sotozen.com)
Foulk, Griffith T., ed. Record of the Transmission of Illumination by the Great Ancestor, Zen Master Keizan. 2 vols. Tokyo: Sōtōshū Shūmuchō, 2017–2018.
Foulk, Griffith T., ed. Record of the Transmission of Illumination by the Great Ancestor, Zen Master Keizan. 2 vols. Tokyo: Sōtōshū Shūmuchō, 2017–2018.;Record of the Transmission of Illumination by the Great Ancestor, Zen Master Keizan;History;The doctrine of buddha-nature in Japanese Buddhism;Carl Bielefeldt; William Bodiford;T. Griffith Foulk;Sarah J. Horton;John R. McRae;Record of the Transmission of Illumination by the Great Ancestor, Zen Master Keizan;Keizan