Zhuangzi Speaks

by
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 1992-07-13
Publisher(s): Princeton Univ Pr
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Summary

During a period of political and social upheaval in China, the unconventional insights of the great Daoist Zhuangzi (369?-286? B.C.) pointed to a way of living naturally. Inspired by his fascination with the wisdom of this sage, the immensely popular Taiwanese cartoonist Tsai Chih Chung created a bestselling Chinese comic book. Tsai had his cartoon characters enact the key parables of Zhuangzi (pronounced jwawngdz), and he rendered Zhuangzi's most enlightening sayings into modern Chinese. Through Tsai's enthusiasm and skill, the earliest and core parts of the Zhuangzi were thus made accessible to millions of Chinese-speaking people with no other real chance of appreciating this major Daoist text. Translated into English by Brian Bruya, the comic book is now available to a Western audience. The classical Chinese text of the selections of the Zhuangzi is reproduced in the margins throughout. Evoked by the translation and the playful cartoons is the spontaneity that Zhuangzi favors as an attitude toward life: abandon presuppositions, intellectual debates, and ambitions, he suggests, and listen to the "music of nature." With the writings attributed to Laozi, the Zhuangzi contributed to an alternative philosophical ideal that matched Confucianism in its impact on Chinese culture. Over the centuries this classical Daoism influenced many aspects of Chinese life, including painting, literature, and the martial arts. It had a particularly strong effect on Chan Buddhism (Japanese Zen). For this book, Donald Munro has written an afterword that places Daoism and the Zhuangzi in historical and cultural context.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments vii
Guide to Pronunciation ix
Map
xiii
The Summer Cicada and the Wonder Tortoise
5(2)
The Little Sparrow's Small Happiness
7(1)
Hui Shi's Giant Gourd
8(2)
The Song Family's Secret Formula
10(2)
The Useless Shu Tree
12(3)
The Tattooed Yue People
15(1)
The Music of the Earth
16(3)
Zhao Wen Quits the Zither
19(1)
Does Wang Ni Know?
20(2)
Is Xi Shi Really Beautiful?
22(1)
Li Ji's Tears
23(1)
Zhang Wuzi's Dream
24(1)
Shadows Talking
25(1)
The Dream of the Butterfly
26(1)
Three at Dawn and Four at Dusk
27(1)
Hui Shi Leans against a Tree
28(1)
The Cook Carves Up a Cow
29(2)
Passing on the Flame
31(1)
The Caged Pheasant
32(1)
Like A Mantis Stopping a Cart
33(2)
The Horse Lover
35(1)
The Earth Spirit's Tree
36(2)
A Tree's Natural Life Span
38(2)
The Freak
40(1)
Oil Burns Itself Out
41(1)
The Tiger Trainer
42(1)
Toeless Shu
43(1)
Nature the Superhero
44(1)
Forgetting the Dao
45(1)
Zi Sang Questions His Fate
46(1)
Digging a Canal in the Ocean Floor
47(1)
Are a Duck's Legs Too Short?
48(1)
The Lost Goat
49(1)
Bandits Have Principles, Too
50(2)
Good Wine, Bad Wine
52(1)
The Yellow Emperor Questions Guangcheng
53(1)
Nature's Friend
54(1)
The Old Wheelwright
55(2)
The Earth and the Sky
57(1)
Crows and Seagulls
58(1)
Confucius Sees a Dragon
59(1)
Don't Ring the Bull's Nose
60(1)
The Wind and the Snake
61(2)
Courage of the Sage
63(2)
The Frog in the Well
65(3)
Learning How to Walk in Handan
68(1)
A Crow Eating a Dead Rat
69(2)
You're Not a Fish
71(1)
Zhuangzi Dreams of a Skeleton
72(2)
Sea Birds Don't Like Music
74(2)
The Drunk Passenger
76(1)
Riding with the Dao
77(2)
The Sweet Water is Gone First
79(2)
Lin Hui Forsakes a Fortune
81(1)
Swallows Nest in the Eaves
82(1)
The Mantis Getting the Cicada
83(2)
Fan Was Never Destroyed
85(1)
Knowledge and the Dao
86(2)
Gengsang Forsakes Fame
88(1)
The Yellow Emperor and the Pasture Boy
89(2)
The Stone Mason and the Ying Man
91(2)
Two Nations on a Snail's Antennae
93(1)
Zhuangzi Borrows Grain
94(1)
The Turtle That Could Predict the Future
95(2)
Natural Use
97(1)
Catch the Fish, Discard the Trap
98(1)
Yang Zhu Studies the Dao
99(1)
Zi Gong's Snow-White Clothes
100(2)
The Bandit Speaks
102(5)
Zhuangzi's Three Swords
107(7)
Confucius in the Black Forest
114(3)
The Man Who Hated His Footprints
117(1)
The Man Who Hated His Shadow
118(1)
Like a Drifting Boat
119(1)
The Dragonslayer
120(2)
Shattering the Dragonpearl
122(2)
Don't Make Sacrifices
124(1)
Zhuangzi on His Deathbed
125(2)
Afterword 127
Donald J. Munro

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