Richard M. Jaffe is professor of religious studies at Duke University. He is the general editor of the Selected Works of D. T. Suzuki and the author of Seeking Sakyamuni: South Asia in the Formation of Modern Japanese Buddhism and Neither Monk nor Layman: Clerical Marriage in Modern Japanese Buddhism. Shigematsu Sōiku is abbot of the Rinzai Zen temple Shōgenji in Shizuoka, Japan. He is the editor-translator of A Zen Forest: Sayings of the Zen Masters and the cotranslator of D. T. Suzuki’s Columbia University Seminar Lectures into Japanese. Tokiwa Gishin is emeritus professor at Hanazono University. He is the translator of Zen and the Fine Arts and the cotranslator of D. T. Suzuki’s Columbia University Seminar Lectures into Japanese. Elizabeth Mary Thomas (1907–1986) was an accomplished Egyptologist who regularly attended Suzuki’s seminars. The manuscript that she compiled based on her remarkably detailed class notes forms the basis of this book.
D. T. Suzuki’s legendary Columbia University lectures position Zen as a lively, iconoclastic, art-friendly, and experiential form of spirituality. Scholar-sleuth Richard Jaffe uncovered a set of almost verbatim lecture notes, providing, for the first time, access to one of the key documents in the transmission of Zen to the West, and his well-researched introduction gives us the moment. -- Norman Fischer, poet, Soto Zen priest, and founder of Everyday Zen Foundation Suzuki’s momentous 1952–53 seminars on Buddhist philosophy captivated his Columbia University audience, and his unique ideas, insights, and interpretations remain alluring. Now we get to join that audience thanks to Jaffe’s fine introduction and labor of love to make these texts available. -- Evan Thompson, author of <i>Waking, Dreaming, Being: Self and Consciousness in Neuroscience, Meditation, and Philosophy</i>