Skip to main content.

The Priest and His Disciples (Shaw Translation)

Gelesen von Expatriate

(4,5 Sterne; 3 Bewertungen)

At the age of twenty-six (at the height of the Great War in Europe), the religious pilgrim and maverick Kurata Hyakuzō wrote a profoundly philosophical play called "The Priest & His Disciples" ("Shukke to sono deshi"). This stage play is based on the life and teachings of the 13th century Buddhist priest Shinran (1173-1263) and quickly became immensely popular. Shinran, the historical founder of the True Pure Land School of Buddhism (Jōdo Shinshū), encounters the poor family of Hino Saemon and his wife Okane, and converses with them about how to live in circumstances of change and turmoil and hardship. Most of the ideas represented as Shinran's are really Kurata's own philosophies, an amalgam of Eastern and Western ideas adapted by his own iconoclastic spirit to the tumultuous times of early twentieth-century Japan. - Summary by Expatriate (5 hr 44 min)

Chapters

Translator's Introduction

7:58

Read by Expatriate

Induction

13:06

Read by Expatriate

Act I, Scene 1

28:09

Read by Expatriate

Act I, Scene 2a

19:01

Read by Expatriate

Act I, Scene 2b

20:26

Read by Expatriate

Act IIa

23:30

Read by Expatriate

Act IIb

23:25

Read by Expatriate

Act III, Scene 1

28:18

Read by Expatriate

Act III, Scene 2

25:05

Read by Expatriate

Act IV, Scene 1

26:37

Read by Expatriate

Act IV, Scene 2

27:56

Read by Expatriate

Act V, Scene 1

24:25

Read by Expatriate

Act V, Scene 2

29:41

Read by Expatriate

Act VI, Scene 1

8:49

Read by Expatriate

Act VI, Scene 2

20:51

Read by Expatriate

Act VI, Scene 3

5:03

Read by Expatriate

Act VI, Scene 4

11:52

Read by Expatriate