Available Formats
Four Huts: Asian Writings on the Simple Life
By (Author) Burton Watson
Illustrated by Stephen Addiss
Shambhala Publications Inc
Shambhala Publications Inc
15th July 2002
United States
General
Non Fiction
East Asian and Indian philosophy
181
Paperback
112
Width 142mm, Height 213mm, Spine 6mm
147g
Four evocative literary works explore the joys of living a life of simplicity and solitude by four classical poet-writers. The short works collected in FOUR HUTS give voice to one of the most treasured aesthetic and spiritual ideals of Asia - that of a simple life lived in a simple dwelling. The texts were written between the ninth and the seventeenth centuries and convey each author's underlying sense of the world and what is to be valued in it.
"This beautifully rendered, expertly designed, small pocket volume is a compact little world in itself, just waiting to be opened." The Japan Times
Burton Watson (19252017) taught Chinese and Japanese literature at Columbia, Stanford, and Kyoto universities. He translated many books from Chinese and Japanese, and was one of the most well-known and respected translators in his field.
He received the Gold Medal Award of the Translation Center at Columbia University in 1979, the PEN Translation Prize in both 1982 and 1995. In 2015, he received the prestigious PEN/Ralph Manheim Medal for Translation. He died in 2017 in Chiba Prefecture, Japan.
Stephen Addiss, PhD, is Professor of Art at the University of Richmond in Virginia. A scholar-artist, he has exhibited his ink paintings and calligraphy in Asia, Europe, and the United States. He is also the author or coauthor of more than thirty books and catalogues about East Asian arts, including The Sound of One Hand: The Paintings and Calligraphy of Zen Master Hakuin.