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Chinese and Japanese aestheticians gathered in Kyoto, Japan to discuss the latest achievements of barberry academic research

author:China News Network
Chinese and Japanese aestheticians gathered in Kyoto, Japan to discuss the latest achievements of barberry academic research

Chinese scholars exchanged views with the president of Japan Garden University, experts from the International Institute of Zen Studies and the Institute of Zen Culture. Photo courtesy of the organizer

Kyoto, October 29 (ZXNET) -- The International Symposium of Barberry Scholars was recently held in Kyoto, Japan, attended by 11 experts and scholars from six universities, including the University of Arizona and Kansai University in Japan, and doctoral students in the direction of barberry. Experts and scholars exchanged the latest research results on the study of the ancestors of barberry, the internationalization of barberry scholarship, the architecture and style of barberry, the art of calligraphy and painting of Huang barberry, the culture of barberry sencha, and the collation of ancient books of barberry.

Dr. Johnson, a researcher at the University of Arizona, introduced the latest progress of the online exhibition of barberry art jointly organized by the Buddhist Research Center of the University of Arizona and the Wanfu Temple of Huang Berry Mountain in Fujian, shared the current status of the collection and research of yellow barberry calligraphy and painting in North American institutions, and introduced the research results of the painting "High Monk Diagram - Zen Master Yin Yuan and His Disciples" in the collection of the Cleveland Museum in the United States.

Matsuura, a well-known historian and professor emeritus at Kansai University in Japan, proposed that during the period of Zen Master Zen Zen Zen Dynasty, Chinese sailing ships that went to Japan to trade were "Junk" (fu boats), silk fabrics, Chinese medicine, and Han Chinese were brought back to Japan, and copper and dried seafood were brought back from Japan. At that time, the Yellow Berry Sangha was basically supported by Fujian sea merchants, so the "Maritime Silk Road" had a close relationship with the Yellow Berry Monks Dongdu.

Chinese and Japanese aestheticians gathered in Kyoto, Japan to discuss the latest achievements of barberry academic research

Chinese scholars conduct academic exchanges at the Institute of Yellow Barberry Culture in Kyoto. Photo courtesy of the organizer

Professor Liao Chiyang of Musashino Art University, who studies the history of overseas Chinese in Japan, put forward an innovative view on why Zen Master Hidden Yuan opened the new yellow barberry to Kyoto Uji, starting with the historical status of Nagasaki, Kyoto and Edo.

Jia Guangzuo, a doctoral student at Northeastern University who is engaged in the study of the independence of the Huang Barberry monk, Geng Wei, a researcher at Otani University who is engaged in Buddhist architecture, and Zhang Yan, a doctoral student at Northeastern University, also reported on the phased results of research on the independence of Yi Shufeng and the architecture of the Huang Berry Sect.

The 11 participating experts and scholars unanimously agreed that the research of barberry is an academic instrument, and the future development of barberry academia should adhere to the road of internationalization. The history of barberry scholarship is a thousand years from the thousand-year history after the opening of the mountain to the east of the Huang barberry, and the four hundred years after the east crossing are flower branches, and the previous eight hundred years are the root veins, which is integrated. Barberry research should adhere to the spirit of rationality, openness, inclusiveness and innovation to create a new academic form of barberry.

Sencha Huang Barberry Kyauki said that Zen Master Okimoto is not only the founder of the Japanese Yellow Barberry Sect, but also the ancestor of the Japanese sencha ceremony. Every May, an all-Japan sencha ceremony is held at Manfukuji Temple on Mount Huangbari in Kyoto.

Bai Bangyu, Vice President of Fujian Huang Berry Zen Culture Research Institute, and Professor Li Doushi, researcher of Huang Berry College, introduced the academic achievements of Fujian Huang Berry Mountain in the past two years and exchanged views on the academic direction of the "Special Issue of Yellow Barberry".

In addition, Master Dingming, the abbot of Wanfu Temple in Huangberry, Fujian, recently led experts from the Fujian Huang Berry Zen Culture Research Institute, the Yellow Berry Academy and the Huang Berry Studies Research Association to visit the Kyoto Huang Berry Culture Research Institute, the Japan-China Linhuang Friendship Exchange Association, the Zen Culture Research Institute of the Public Welfare Foundation, and the International Institute of Zen Studies.

Tomomo Tanaka, Deputy Director of the Institute of Yellow Barberry Culture, introduced the exchange of international visiting scholars at the Institute, shared the latest developments in Huang Barberry's academic research, provided Chinese scholars with rare books in the "Wenhua Temple" collection that need to be consulted, and discussed with Master Ding Ming the vision of carrying out collaborative research and resource sharing of Huang Barberry Academic Studies.

Chinese and Japanese aestheticians gathered in Kyoto, Japan to discuss the latest achievements of barberry academic research

Gen-la Dingming and experts from the International Institute of Zen Studies in Japan exchanged the digitization project of ancient books of barberry. Photo courtesy of the organizer

Fumio Isoda, President of Garden University, introduced the university's three international Zen research projects and hoped to cooperate with the Fujian Huang Berry Zen Culture Research Institute. Takayo Iijima, a researcher at the International Institute of Zen Studies at Garden University, proposed that the digitization of the Yanagida Bunko be shared with the Fujian Huangbeishan Academic Institution. The two sides reached a consensus on the establishment of a regular academic exchange mechanism.

Hiromichi Nakagawa, director of the Japan-China Linji Friendship Exchange Association and the Zen Culture Research Institute, said that Rinzai Zen had a profound impact on Japanese culture after it spread to Japan during the Song Dynasty. Gen-la Ding Ming introduced the publication of the International Zen Studies Series and the International Yellow Barberry Zen Culture Research Series, co-edited with Professor Yang Zengwen, as well as the achievements of the International Yellow Berry Zen Forum. (End)

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