Suggested Topics for Final Paper, REL407 Zen Buddhism

Final Paper due 3/19

 

Topics

 

1. Bodhidharma - Back to the Future

Write a paper from the first-person perspective of Bodhidharma evaluating three of the Zen Buddhist figures we have studied in this course, ranking them from the least profound to the most profound as having attained the "flesh, bones, and marrow" of Bodhidharma's Zen understanding. Discuss the strengths and weaknesses of each figure's understanding. Also briefly address the question: If all things are equal in emptiness, in the oneness of reality, then what basis does Bodhidharma have for ranking these Zen figures?
 

2. Zen Self-Deconstruction

Within the discourse of Zen Buddhism, we have seen that there is a strong critical and self-critical strain. Among others we have seen Bodhidharma who criticized the Buddhist Emperor Wu; the illiterate woodcutter Hui-neng who outstripped the learned but staid approach taken by Shen-hsiu; the wild man Ikkyu who broke all of the rules yet became the abbot of Daitokuji, one of the most prominent Zen temple complexes of Japan; and Natalie Goldberg who sought the Zen life beyond words even as she chose the path of words as a writer. Select any two of the figures that we have studied this quarter and discuss this iconoclasm within Zen Buddhism, an iconoclasm which is directed both outwardly at past tradition and inwardly to the practitioner him or herself. Does this critical strain reveal a fundamental flaw within the tradition? Or, perhaps, is it a sign of the vitality and ability of the tradition to continually renew itself? (Suggestion: Find one representative passage from the readings that seems to speak to this issue as a launchpad around which you can construct a clear and effective narrative.)
 

3. Zen Buddhism and Gender

Several works we have read throughout the course deal with the issue of gender and Buddhism. In class and in your papers, one of the themes that has emerged concerns the relation between the Zen Buddhist emphasis on emptiness and enlightenment on the one hand and social equality and rights influenced by Western thinking on the other. Based on the Zen Buddhist readings we have read so far, what kind, if any, social vision should emerge out of the Zen Buddhist understanding of emptiness and awakening, and how should Western notions of social equality and individual rights criticize and help to reshape Zen Buddhist views of the individual self or selfhood?
 

4. Natalie Goldberg - Zen and Writing

Natalie Goldberg sets out on a spiritual journey in which she struggles to resolve the tensions between her desire to write and her will to carry out Zen practice. In the end, she tells us that she would give up writing to have a cup of tea with her teacher Katagiri Roshi one more time. Why is writing so important to her in terms of establishing a social, cultural, and spiritual identity? Would she really have given up writing? If not, does this diminish the fact that she says she would?
 

5. Maura Soshin O'Halloran - Life Beyond Death

Maura Soshin O'Halloran in a sense chose to be multi-cultural: to enter the world of Japanese Buddhist monks in training while retaining her identity as a Irish woman; to enter the realm of intense religious practice while affirming her identity as a woman, a sexual being, and a human being with diverse intellectual interests. Her early death leaves us with a mystery as to the ultimate destiny of her life. Choose one of the following topics in relation to these circumstances:
a) Discuss the ways in which she did or did not resolve the possible tension between these diverse elements while she was alive. Was there a tension at all? If so, how did her religious practice influence this.
Or:
b) Provide additional narrative or journal entries that might reflect her further journeys had she lived. (Be sure to footnote your paper carefully if you choose this approach.)
 

6. Maura Soshin O'Halloran - Spiritual Practice and Culture

Throughout her journal entries, Maura Soshin O'Halloran records her reflections on Zen practice in the context of her religious or spiritual journey as well as in the context of Zen as a Japanese cultural phenomenon. On the one hand, she attempts to make sense of and integrate Buddhist philosophical notions into her understanding of practice. On the other, she has serious questions about the behavior of her fellow monks and their attitudes towards women, society, and one another. How does she relate these concerns, and how do they hinder her or provide fuel for her own development?
 

7. D. T. Suzuki and Zen Orientalism

D. T. Suzuki was one of the first figures to introduce Zen Buddhism to the West. In recent years scholars have debated the significance of his contribution. Bernard Faure, one of the most prominent scholars of Zen Buddhism, criticizes Suzuki of perpetrating a kind of "Zen Orientalism," the creation of a false image of Zen that ignores historical tradition and caters to romanticized Western images of Zen. Erich Fromm, a prominent psychologist and left-leaning Western intellectual, praises Suzuki as a model of unbiased humanity. (Articles by all three authors are included at the end of the course packet.)
A) Write a paper examining the strengths and weaknesses of Faure and Fromm's views. What do you think? Why? (I can recommend additional sources for those who are interested.)
Or:
B) Construct a dialogue between Fromm and Faure in which they debate the issue of Suzuki's possible biases and contributions.
 

8. Through Prison Bars

You have lived a colorful life so far, experiencing periods of wild abandon as well as close discipline. Now, at the age of thirty, you find yourself in prison convicted for harboring criminals (It is up to you to decide what kind of criminals; perhaps they are radical activists, thieves, or even murderers.) After having been in prison for a few years, you begin to read books on Zen Buddhism and turn inwards instead of simply directing your anger outwardly. You undergo some kind of spiritual transformation. Write a letter(s) to your lover conveying what has happened to you and its significance. You may combine insights from more than one text if you like, but it is recommended that you restrict your sources to two or three sources and not try to do too much. Begin the letter by writing either a preface or part of the letter that lets the reader know what kind of criminals you harbored, whether you were justly convicted, and what punishment you face.
 

9. Near Death

You have a terminal case of liver cancer. Several months have passed since the diagnosis and now the end is near. Your lover/partner is far away and is unable to share this time with you, caught in a foreign land with an invalid passport. You are writing a letter to your lover/partner expressing what the past has meant to you, what you have learned as you struggled with the illness and impending death, and how you now see life and death. Write this letter drawing on the works we have read. You may combine insights from more than one text if you like, but it is recommended that you restrict your sources to two or three sources and not try to do too much.