Prinsip Dasar Budha Zen dalam Chanoyu

Authors

  • Anastasia Merry Christiani Widya Putri Japanese Department, Faculty of Letters, Bina Nusantara University Jln. Kemanggisan Ilir III No.45, Kemanggisan, Jakarta Barat 11480
  • Ratna Handayani Japanese Department, Faculty of Letters, Bina Nusantara University Jln. Kemanggisan Ilir III No.45, Kemanggisan, Jakarta Barat 11480

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21512/lc.v4i2.361

Abstract

One of the Japanese traditional cultures that had been well known since the 16th century was chanoyu, the tea ceremony presented for the guests and carried out in chasitsu. Tea was introduced in Japan in the 16th century by bhiksu Zen. Formerly, the tea was used for a light stimulation for meditation, drug ingredients, media for Buddha Zen dissemination, dan developing chanoyu spiritual basic. One of the tea ceremony masters, Sen no Rikyu, used four basic principles in chanoyu, those were harmony (wa), respect (kei), purity (sei), silence (jaku). Article elaborated the four basic principles of Buddha Zen in tea ceremony applied in Urasenke chanoyu. Library research and descriptive analysis were applied in this research. The research results indicate that there are wa-keisei-jaku principles and wabi sabi concepts in the Japanese tea ceremony.

Dimensions

Plum Analytics

References

Abercrombie, S. (2001). “Wabi Sabi: A New Look at Japanese Design / Wabi Sabi Style”. Interior Design. New York: Jun 2001. Vol. 72, Iss. 8; p125

Danandjaja, James.1997. Folklore Jepang ( dilihat dari kacamata indonesia). Jakarta: Pustaka utama grafiti.

Madubrangti, D. (2008). Kebudayaan Jepang: Perkawinan dan Busana Pengantin Tradisioanal Jepang. NIKKEN, Jurnal Penelitian Kejepangan, Vol.9, No 1, ISSN 1411-0733, p31-48

Pettigrew, J., & Richardson, B. (2008), The New Tea Companion. Kentucky: Benjamin Press.

Plutschow, H.E. (1986). Historical Chanoyu. Tokyo: The Japan Times, Ltd.

Sadler, A. L. (1998). Cha-no-yu The Japanese Tea Ceremony. Tokyo: Charles.E.Tuttle. Company.

Shiratori, H. (2007). Bukkyō Chō Nyūmon. Tokyo: PHP Kenkyūsho

Shoshitsu, Sen XV. (1988). Chanoyu: The Urasenke Tradition of Tea. Tokyo: The Weather hill, Inc.

Shoshitsu XV, Sen. (1997). Tea Life Tea Mind. Tokyo: John Weather hill, lnc.

Suzuki, D. T. (1991). Zen and Japanese Culture. Tokyo: Charles.E.Tuttle. Company

Tanaka, Sen’o. (1998). The Tea Ceremony. Japan: Kodansha International and Dai Nihon Chado Gakkai

Varley, P., & Kumakura Isao. Eds. (1989). Tea in Japan: Essays on the History of Chanoyu. Honolulu: University Of Hawaii Press

Downloads

Published

2010-11-30
Abstract 1182  .
PDF downloaded 3248  .