The books, articles, and websites listed below were used as research materials for Flowers of Emptiness: Imaginal Haiku and may be helpful for additional reading:
- Barnhill, D. L. (2004). Haiku: Selected Poems of Matsuo Bashō. State University of New York Press.
- Bashō, M. (1688). The Face of God. matsu-basho-haiku.
- Biringer, T. (2011). Zen Buddhism Dōgen and the Shōbōgenzō. Grasping Emptiness by the Nose.
- Casey, E. S. (1974). Toward an Archetypal Imagination. Spring, 1974, 1-32.
- Casey, E. S. (1976). Imagining: A phenomenological study. Bloomington: Indiana University
- Press.
- Cheetham, T. The Legacy of Henri Corbin.
- https://henrycorbinproject.blogspot.com/2009/06/literalizing-imaginal.html
- Cronkleton, E. (2020). The 5 Koshas: What They Mean in Eastern Philosophy.
- DBpedia. On Japanese Prosody.
- Desai, K. (2017). The Art of Transformational Sleep. Lotus Press.
- Dharma Friends of Israel. The Kayas: Bodies of a Buddha.
- Dōgen, E. (1231-1253). Shōbōgenzō: 44: On the Flowering of the Unbounded (Kūge), pp. 552-564. The Zen Site.
- Frogpond (47:1, 2024). The Journal of the Haiku Society of America.
- Goldstein, J. & Kornfield, J. (2001). Seeking the Heart of Wisdom: The Path of Insight
Meditation. Shambhala.
- Guo G. (2021). Silent Illumination: A Chan Buddhist Path to Natural Awakening. Shambhala.
- Habito, R. L .F. The Trikāya Doctrine in Buddhism. Vol. 6, 1986, pp. 52-62. University of Hawai’i
Press.
- Heine, S. (2015). Dōgen and Sōtō Zen: Dōgen, a Medieval Japanese Monk Well-
Versed in Chinese Poetry: What He Did and Did Not Compose, pp. 74-108. Oxford Academic.
- Henderson, H. G. (1958). An Introduction to Haiku: An Anthology of Poems and Poets From
Bashō to Shiki. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group.
- Hindu Janajagruti Samiti. What Are the Means of Obtaining Bliss.
- Inviting Abundance (2020). What unfolds from Emptiness? Thoughts on Reiki and Tendai
Buddhism. 1. Emptiness, Sunyata.
- Japanese Language Stack Exchange. Why is 空, and not 無, used to define “void”, “emptiness”
in a Buddhist context. What are their nuances?
- Leighton, T. D. (2002). Hongzhi, Dōgen and the Background of Shikantaza, Preface: The Art of
Just Sitting: Essential Writings on the Zen Practice of Shikantaza, Loori, J. D. (Ed.). Wisdom
Publications.
- Linguistics: Does Japanese Have Pronouns.
- Liou, R. & Scott, G. An Introduction to Japanese Sentence Structure.
- Makino, S. & Tsutsui, M. (1989). A Dictionary of Basic Japanese Grammar. The Japanese
Times.
- Mark, J. J. (2020). Upanishads: Summary and Commentary. World History Encyclopedia.
- Marsh, G., Haiku and Zen, The Haiku Foundation.
- Michau, M. R. (2004). Levinas and Kierkegaard: Judaism, Christianity, and an Ethics of Witnessing*. Purdue University English and Philosophy PhD Program Graduate Student Conference.
- Modern Haiku: An Independent Journal of Haiku and Haiku Studies.
- Modern Haiku: The Essence of Haiku by Bruce Ross (Volume 38. 3 Autumn 2007).
- Nearman, Rev. H., O.B.C., Trans. (2007). Shōbōgenzo: The Treasure House of the Eye of the
True Teaching: A Trainee’s Translation of Great Master Dōgen’s Spiritual Masterpiece
(2007). Shasta Abbey Press.
- Nishijima, G. & Cross, C. (2021). Master Dōgen’s Shōbōgenzō, Book 1. Independently
published supported by the Japan Foundation.
- Nishijima, G. & Cross, C. (2021). Master Dōgen’s Shōbōgenzō, Book 2. Independently
published supported by the Japan Foundation.
- Nishijima, G. & Cross, C. (2021). Master Dōgen’s Shōbōgenzō, Book 3. Independently
published supported by the Japan Foundation.
- Nishijima, G. & Cross, C. (2021). Master Dōgen’s Shōbōgenzō, Book 4. Independently
published supported by the Japan Foundation.
- O’Brien, B. (2018). The Trikaya: The Three Bodies of Buddha. Learn Religions.
- Olivelle, P. (1992). The Samnyasa Upanisads: Hindu Scriptures on Ascetism and Renunciation.
Oxford University Press.
- Pizer, A. (2021). Anadamaya Kosha: The Koshas and the Human Body.
- Ray, R. (2004). Trikaya: The Mahayana Buddhist Trinity. Lions Roar.
- Rosen, D. & Weishaus, J. (2014). The Healing Spirit of Haiku. Resource Publications.
- Salzmann, J. de. (2010). The Reality of Being: The Fourth Way of Gurdjieff. Shambhala.
- Sato, H. (2018). On Haiku. New Directions Publishing.
- Sekida, K. (2005). Two Zen Classics: The Gateless Gate and the Blue Cliff Records. Shambhala.
- Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj: Great Guidance for Life and Meditation, Awareness and
Consciousness by Vasundhara, (2017, July 18).
- Swami Sharyanada (1921). Taittiriya-Upanishad. The Ramakrishna Math.
- Swati (2022). Different Stages of Samadhi According to Yoga Sutras. Vedic Feed.
- Takahashi, M. (1983). Essence of Dogen. Routledge.
- Tasker, B. (1994). Haiku and Zen: The Bodhisattva of Forgetfulness. The Bare Press.
- Willis, P., Utopian Scenario Sketching: An Imaginal Pedagogy for Life Giving Civilisation.
Australian Journal of Adult Learning (Volume 51, Number 3, November 2011).
- Wilson, R. (2004). Interview of Joel Weishaus. On the Occasion of Publication of The Healing
Spirit of Haiku. The University of New Mexico.
- With Doņa: Doņa Sutra (AN 4:36). Talks, Writings & Translations of Thānissaro Bhikkhu.
- World Haiku Review: The Magazine of The World Haiku Club (Vol. 3, Issue 2, December
2003). Disjunctive Dragonfly.
- World Haiku Review: The Official Magazine of The World Haiku Club (Spring, 2023).
Vanguard Haiku.