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The White Path Crossing Two Rivers: A Contemporary Japanese Garden Represents the Past |
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著者 |
Ten Grotenhuis, Elizabeth
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掲載誌 |
Journal of Garden History
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巻号 | v.15 |
出版年月日 | 1995.01-03 |
ページ | 1 - 18 |
資料の種類 | 期刊論文=Journal Article |
言語 | 英文=English |
ノート | 720
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キーワード | Nakane, Kinsaku, 1917-1995; Buddhist Gardens in Japan; Buddhist Iconography; Grotenhuis, Elizabeth Ten |
抄録 | The writer discusses the White Path Crossing Two Rivers garden,built by Kinsaku Nakane in 1986 at the Buddhist temple of Taimadera, Japan. The garden is faithful to a long tradition of rock-filled,dry landscape gardens (karesansui) in which gravel substitutes for water. Although such dry landscape gardens have been associated with Zen Buddhist monastery gardens from the 16th century onward,the inspiration for the Taimadera garden explicates a different Buddhist tradition--the Pure Land school of Buddhism. The garden interprets a didactic tale devised by a seventh-century Chinese monk,in which a pilgrim must cross a white path that is surrounded by fire and water. The writer goes on to consider the layers of literary and visual representations that underlie this garden,which have been,until now,unpublished. |
ISSN | 01445170 |
ヒット数 | 286 |
作成日 | 2001.01.15
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更新日期 | 2016.07.26 |
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