A fire runs through all things Zen koans for facing the climate crisis

Susan Murphy, 1950-

Book - 2023

"Zen koans are a tradition of holistic inquiry based on "encounter stories" from East Asia's most radical Buddhist tradition. Turning this form of inquiry toward the climate crisis, Zen teacher Susan Murphy contends that koans can help us enter the mind of not-knowing, from which acceptance and possibility freely emerge. Koans reveal intimate, creative, mythic, artful, playful, provocative, humorous, and fierce ways to engage the work and art of protecting and healing ourselves and our world. To see crisis through koans, and as a koan, is to break the frame called "problem" and find instead an original wholeness. In addition to delving deeply into the koan tradition through dozens of traditional koans, this boo...k also illuminates the little-known Zen resonance with the oldest continuous body of indigenous wisdom on earth, summed up in the subtle Australian Aboriginal word Country. Murphy draws from her study and co-teaching with Dulumunmun, Uncle Max Harrison, a distinguished Yuin Elder, to show how this millennia-deep taproot of intelligence confirms the aliveness of the earth and the kinship of all beings"--

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2nd Floor New Shelf 294.3443/Murphy (NEW SHELF) Due Jul 2, 2024
Subjects
Published
Boulder, Colorado : Shambhala [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Susan Murphy, 1950- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xviii, 229 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781645471080
  • Preface
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction: Fire, Rain … and a Rhinoceros
  • Part 1. A Tipping Point in Consciousness
  • 1. What Is This Self?
  • 2. Precarious
  • 3. A Fire Runs through All Things
  • Part 2. Medicine and Sickness Heal into Each Other
  • 4. Living in a House on Fire
  • 5. The Lotus in the Midst of Flame
  • Part 3. The Whole Earth Is Medicine
  • 6. The Fire, Earthed
  • 7. This Fire Is a Path
  • Notes
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Readers can use Zen koans to confront the current climate crisis and connect to the natural world, contends Buddhist teacher Murphy (Red Thread Zen) in this thought-provoking outing. Defined by their "paradoxical form" and "unsentimental" language, koans loosen traditional ways of understanding problems and foster an "intimacy" with "not-knowing"--an attitude especially well-suited to moments of crisis, Murphy suggests, because it reveals "unasked questions that can radically open the ground from which we can proceed." ("Medicine and sickness heal each other. The whole Earth is medicine. Then what is the self?" asks Yunmen Wenyan, a Chinese Zen master of the late ninth and early 10th century.) Murphy adds that embracing crisis can ignite one's ability "to care deeply," making the present "a strangely privileged moment to be sharply alive, on call, awake to the Earth." Murphy's offering brims with Buddhist wisdom and unexpected, creative linkages ("Like a koan breaking open in a public way, something wonderful can result from civil disobedience," a practice readers can employ using "playful, symbolic, impassioned, and yet morally impeccable tactics"), even if its poetic sensibility might frustrate those seeking more concrete suggestions for activism. Still, it's an enlightening look at the evergreen usages of an ancient art. (Nov.)

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