I. The development of the institution. 1. Japanese Zen pioneers and their patrons. Stages of acculturation -- Motives of Japanese Zen pioneers -- Eisai and the Kamakura shogunate -- Enni and Kujō Michiie -- Shinchi and the ideal of the recluse -- Dōgen and his patrons. 2. Chinese émigré monks and Japanese warrior-rulers. Hōjō patronage -- Hōjō Tokiyori and Lan-chi'i Tao-lung -- Hōjō Tokiyori and Wu-an P'u-ning -- Hōjō Tokimune's patronage of Zen -- Hōjō Tokimune and Wu-hsueh Tsu-yuan -- Hōjō Sadatoki and I-shan I-ning -- Hōjō Takatoki's patronage of Zen -- The Zen contribution to warrior culture -- Provincial diffusion of Zen -- Imperial patronage of Zen. 3. The articulation of the Gozan system. Go-Daigo and Mūso -- Reorganization of the Gozan -- Go-Diago's motives -- Ashikaga patronage of Zen -- Takauji and Tadayoshi
The building of Tenryūji and Ashikaga power -- Ankokuji and Rishōtō -- Gozan, Jissatsu, and Shozan -- Regional distribution -- Centralization and control of the Gozan by the Ashikaga -- The Tenka Sōroku and the Inryōshoku -- Zenith and decline -- The emergence of Daitokuji and Myōshinji. 4. The Zen monastic life and rule. The development of the rule -- The problem of the Pai-chang code -- The Ch'an-men regulations and the Ch'an-yuan code -- Introduction of the Ch'an monastic rule to Japan -- The Rinsenji code -- Bakufu regulation of the Gozan. 5. The monastery and its sub-temples. Transmission of the ground plan -- The setting -- The layout -- Gates -- The Buddah hall -- The Dharma hall -- The Abbott's building -- The bathhouse, latrines, and washstands -- The monk's hall -- The reading room -- The kitchen-office.
6. The community. Population -- The abbott -- The officers -- Acolytes -- Postulants and novices. 7. The Zen monastic economy. Ch'an communities in China -- Japan: Zen monastic domains -- The Engakuji economy -- The Nanzenji economy -- The Daitokuji economy -- Management of the Zen monastic domain.
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