Foreword
Peter D. Hershock
Acknowledgments
Introduction to Buddhist East Asia: Origins, Core Doctrines, Transmission, and Schools
Robert H. Scott and James McRae
Part 1: Creative Pedagogies for Teaching Buddhist East Asia
1. Three Common Misconceptions about East Asian Buddhisms: On Women and Gender, Violence and Nonviolence, and Philosophy and Religion
Sarah A. Mattice
2. "Meditation Is the Embodiment of Wisdom": Chan and Zen Buddhism in the Philosophy Classroom
Elizabeth Schiltz
3. The Possibility and Costs of Responsibly Teaching East Asian and Buddhist Philosophy
Mark Wells
4. Brains, Blades, and Buddhists: Pedagogical Skirmishes at the Intersection of Philosophy of Mind, the Way of the Sword, and Buddhism
Jesus Ilundain-Agurruza
5. Revitalizing the Familiar: A Practical Application of Dogen's Transformative Zen
George Wrisley
Part 2: East Asian Buddhisms and the Humanities: Ethics, Art, and Politics
6. The Finger that Points to the Earth: East Asian Buddhism as a Conceptual Resource for Environmental Philosophy
James McRae
7. Ecological Self-understanding in Chinese Buddhism: Investigating an Epistemic Virtue
Jesse Butler
8. Wisdom and Compassion in Chinul, Korean Seon Buddhism, and Postmodern Ethics
Robert H. Scott
9. The Lovelorn Lady and the Stony Monk: Women, Sexuality, and Imagination in the Kegon Engi Emaki
Sujung Kim
10. The Spirit of Shaolin on Screen: Buddhism and Cultural Politics in Chinese Cinema
Melissa Croteau and Xin Zhang
11. A Century of Critical Buddhism in Japan
James Mark Shields
Glossary of East Asian Buddhist Terms
List of Contributors
Index
Robert H. Scott is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of North Georgia. His previous books include The Significance of Indeterminacy: Perspectives from Asian and Continental Philosophy (coedited with Gregory Moss). James McRae is Professor of Philosophy and Religious Studies at Westminster College. His previous books include Japanese Environmental Philosophy (coedited with J. Baird Callicott); Environmental Philosophy in Asian Traditions of Thought (coedited with J. Baird Callicott), also published by SUNY Press; and The Philosophy of Ang Lee (coedited with Robert Arp and Adam Barkman).