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Grassroots Zen: Community and Practice the Twenty-First Century
Grassroots Zen: Community and Practice the Twenty-First Century

Grassroots Zen: Community and Practice the Twenty-First Century

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Size: Paperback

Get it at Barnes and Noble
“Steger and Besserman offer something quite different, and quite welcome… a Zen that comes to terms with, and ultimately transcends, the hierarchical, sexist, otherworldly, and pseudo-militaristic overtones of the Zen tradition.” — “This book will appeal to [all] who are uncomfortable with Zen’s hierarchies and moral prescriptions.” — “... Steger and Besserman name and describe a phenomenon that is occurring all over the country: relatively small, democratically run groups of Zen Buddhist practitioners are banding together and sustaining a sangha, or community, free of the hierarchy and formality of the monastery.” —Publishers Weekly “A short, clear presentation on one way to make Zen less Japanese and more Western... “ —Rita M. Gross, envisions a socially engaged Buddhism where zazen is integrated each day with work, family, and social obligations. Though both authors have practiced traditional Zen for decades, here they eschew the militaristic, patriarchal tendencies of Zen in favor of "an egalitarian community of socially mobile members who place less emphasis upon transmission and hierarchy than on individual responsibility." Married university professors and authors ( ) and (aka Perle Epstein) ( and ) studied first under the cultural weight of Japanese Zen, then with the light-footed lay master Robert Aitken. Founders of the Princeton Area Zen Group in NJ, they have been teaching their democratic, grassroots-style of Zen for over twenty-five years.
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