Available Formats
The Journal of Wu Yubi: The Path to Sagehood
By (Author) Wu Yubi
Translated by Theresa Kelleher
Hackett Publishing Co, Inc
Hackett Publishing Co, Inc
15th September 2013
United States
General
Non Fiction
299.512092
Paperback
230
Width 140mm, Height 216mm
284g
Most general studies of Neo-Confucianism focus on the leading thinkers of the Song (960-1279) and Ming (1368-1644) dynasties, such as the Cheng brothers (Cheng Hao and Cheng Yi), Zhu Xi, and Wang Yangming, with the dominant emphasis being their key philosophical ideas as expressed in their various writings. What readers seldom get is a glimpse of how scholars struggled with putting their ideas into practice, as there are few extended firsthand accounts of anyone engaged in the daily pursuit of the Neo-Confucian goal of sagehood.
Wu Yubi undertook his intense inward turn toward self-perfection and sagehood in a political atmosphere of severe intellectual repression when it had become impossible for any thinker to venture outside the state-sanctioned Neo-Confucian orthodoxy. Wu found that the orthodoxy itself could be taken to furnish effective guidelines to making oneself a better person. His diary shows how demanding, frustrating, and unending such a quest might turn out to be. . . . Kelleher has beautifully accomplished the demanding job of addressing the needs of specialists, students and general readers. She has placed Wu Yubi in historical and cultural context and has made him humanly accessible. --John Dardess, University of Kansas
M. Theresa Kelleher is Associate Professor of Asian Studies and World Religions at Manhattanville College.