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Reviews
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Fascination with the Tao-te-ching is never-ending. But until
now, the curious have had very few avenues for exploring the many facets
of Lao-tzu's work other than the myriad translations and their brief introductions.
In Lao-tzu and the Tao-te-ching, scholars Livia Kohn and Michael
LaFargue invite some of the top minds in ancient Chinese philosophy and
language to apply their technical expertise to the Tao-te-ching.
The result is a playground of ideas and information. In addition to penning
an essay on the evolution of Lao-tzu into a full-blown Taoist god, Kohn
also translates an essay from French and another from Japanese--and they
are two of the best in the book. While religion specialist Julia Hardy
rehashes influential Western interpretations of the Tao-te-ching,
Isabelle Robinet, a French historian who studies China, introduces us to
a few of the 700 or so Chinese commentaries. Japanese religious historian
Yoshiko Kamitsuka does as well with a fascinating study of Taoist sculpture--its
gods, its inscriptions, and its development. Here is the latest on who
Lao-tzu was and when the Tao-te-ching was written, and what a difference
it will make to your own reading of this perennial favorite. --Brian
Bruya
Lao-tzu and the Tao-te-ching presents a coherent collection of materials
on the ancient Chinese classic and its author, describing traditional and
modern Western Interpretations. Written and edited by recognized international
specialists in the field, this book brings Lao-tzu and the Tao-te-ching
together to present current scholarship on their history and interpretation |