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An Investigation of the Relationship between Prince Shōtoku’s Shōmangyō-gisho and Two Dunhuang Buddhist Manuscripts: A Debate over Originality and Canonical Value |
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Author |
Dennis, Mark (著)
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Source |
Hualin International Journal of Buddhist Studies
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Volume | v.3 n.1 Special Issue: Manuscript Studies and Xuanzang Studies |
Date | 2020.05 |
Pages | 1 - 46 |
Publisher | Cambria Press |
Publisher Url |
http://www.cambriapress.com/
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Location | New York, US [紐約州, 美國] |
Content type | 期刊論文=Journal Article |
Language | 英文=English |
Note | The author is Professor of East Asian Religions at Texas Christian University. |
Keyword | Dunhuang manuscripts; alse-composition-hypothesis; Fujieda Akira; Prince Shōtoku; Sangyō-gisho; Shōmangyō-gisho; true-composition-hypothesis |
Abstract | This article examines the relationship between Nai 93 and Tama 24—two manuscript fragments discovered at Dunhuang—and the Shōmangyō-gisho, a Buddhist text written in classical Chinese that scholars traditionally attributed to Japan’s Prince Shōtoku (574–622). This discussion focuses on Fujieda Akira’s discovery that these Dunhuang manuscripts predate and closely resemble the text attributed to Shōtoku. Fujieda’s research caused heated scholarly debate by questioning the Shōmangyō-gisho’s authorship and value, leading to the production of a substantial body of research in the late 1960s and 1970s seeking to clarify the relationship between the Shōmangyō-gisho and the Dunhuang manuscripts. Specialists in Shōtoku Studies saw these efforts as crucial because assertions of the Shōmangyō-gisho’s originality are central to its perceived value. One can view this research as part of the broader search for the ‘true record’, a goal that informed much of the scholarship on the Shōmangyō-gisho and two other Buddhist commentaries attributed to the prince. After discussing Fujieda’s work, the article examines how those who accept Shōtoku’s authorship of the Shōmangyō-gisho tried to respond to Fujieda’s key findings, focusing on how they address the Dunhuang discoveries in modern translations and critical editions of the text attributed to the prince. It concludes by offering an alternative angle of critical vision on the relationship between these texts that differs in key ways from this received body of scholarship. |
Table of contents | Introduction 2 The Search for the ‘True Record’ 4 The Discovery of the Dunhuang Manuscripts 5 The True-Composition Hypothesis Response to the Dunhuang Manuscripts 8 Buddhist Scriptural Self-sufficiency 11 Modern Shōmangyō-gisho Scholarship 13 Premodern Shōmangyō-gisho Editions 15 Modern Versions of the Shōmangyō-gisho 19 Six Post-Dunhuang Editions of the Shōmangyō-gisho 20 Reflections on the Scholarly Field 31 Conclusion 33 |
ISSN | 25762923 (P); 25762931 (E) |
DOI | https://dx.doi.org/10.15239/hijbs.03.01.01 |
Hits | 383 |
Created date | 2021.03.23 |
Modified date | 2021.03.23 |
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