The article is available if you go to a research library that subscribes to
Project JSTOR. Check the public on line catalog for your friendly
neighborhood university library. Search for Monumenta Nipponica and check
the long form of the catalog record. If the institution does have access,
you should find a link (or at least the URL) to the online version. If you
aren't affiliated with the institution, you will probably have to go use
the library's computer to access the material.
Rich
At 09:49 PM 2/1/2005, you wrote:
>Bill,
>
>Another excellent source on the history of the Komuso and the Fuke
>sect is:
>
>"Shakuhachi Zen: The Fukeshu and Komuso"
> James H. Sanford
> in *Monumenta Nipponica: Studies in Japanese Culture*,
> Volume XXXII, Number 4, Winter 1977, pp.411-440
>
>
>Sanford was, at the time, Assistant Professor of Religion at UNC
>Chapel Hill, and the scholarship of the article is impressive.
>
>Anyone interested in the history of the shakuhachi will find this
>worth the trouble of digging up.
>
>So true, but, alas, the text is not, to my knowledge, available online.
_____________________________________________
List subscription information is at:
http://communication.ucsd.edu/shaku/listsub.html
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Fri Jan 06 2006 - 10:00:42 PST