Urs App (born 1949 in Rorschach, Switzerland) is a historian of ideas, religions, and philosophies with a special interest in the history and modes of interaction between East and West.
Focuses of research are Buddhist studies (especially Zen Buddhism), the history of orientalism, the history of the European discovery of Asian religions, the history of philosophy in East and West (in particular also Schopenhauer's reception of Asian religions and philosophies), and the exchange of ideas between Asia and the West.
Books
Zen Meister Yunmen. Leben und Lehre des letzten Giganten der Zen-Klassik. Wil: UniversityMedia, 2018 (ISBN978-3-906000-29-9)
Zen Master Yunmen. His Life and Essential Sayings. Boulder: Shambhala, 2018 (ISBN978-1-61180-559-8)
Michel-Jean-François Ozeray and Urs App.The First Western Book on Buddhism and Buddha. Wil: UniversityMedia, 2017 (ISBN978-3-906000-27-5)
Schopenhauer's Compass. An Introduction to Schopenhauer's Philosophy and its Origins. Wil: UniversityMedia, 2014 (ISBN978-3-906000-03-9)
The Cult of Emptiness. The Western Discovery of Buddhist Thought and the Invention of Oriental Philosophy. Rorschach / Kyoto: UniversityMedia, 2012 (ISBN978-3-906000-09-1). (Listed among the best Buddhist books of 2012 by the Buddhadharma journal)[8]
Richard Wagner and Buddhism. Rorschach / Kyoto: UniversityMedia, 2011 (ISBN978-3-906000-00-8)
The Birth of Orientalism. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2010 (ISBN978-0-8122-4261-4)[9] (Winner of the 2012 book prize of the French Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres)[10]
Slow Photography: Koichiro Kurita. Documentary film for the exhibition of the Japanese photographer Koichiro Kurita at the Farnsworth Art Museum, Rockland, Maine, US (2018).
Sengai. Documentary for the exhibition of works by the Japanese Zen master and painter Sengai at the Rietberg Museum, Zürich, Switzerland (2014).[12]
Der Teebesen. Documentary film for the Japanese Bamboo objects exhibition in the Ethnographic Museum[13] of the University of Zurich, Switzerland (2003),[14] at the Ethnological Museum Munich (Völkerkundemuseum München, 2006), and at the Trinkkultur - Kultgetränk exhibition at the Völkerkundemuseum of Zurich University, 20 June 2014 - 21 June 2015[15] (in collaboration with Monica Esposito).
On the Way to Tōhaku's Pine Forest. Documentary film for the Hasegawa Tōhaku art exhibition (2002) at the Rietberg Museum, Zürich (in collaboration with Monica Esposito)
Dangki. Documentary shown in 2001 on France 2 (in collaboration with Monica Esposito).
Oracles in China. Documentary shown at the Oracle exhibition 2000 at the Rietberg Museum, Zürich (in collaboration with Monica Esposito).
Oracles in Japan. Documentary shown at the Oracle exhibition 2000 at the Rietberg Museum, Zürich (in collaboration with Monica Esposito).
Chinese Oracle Kids. Documentary shown at the Oracle exhibition 2000 at the Rietberg Museum, Zürich (in collaboration with Monica Esposito).
CD-ROM
ZenBase CD1.[16][17] Kyoto: International Research Institute for Zen Buddhism, 1995 (ISBN4-938796-18-X;[18] pioneering CD-ROM with over eighty Chinese Zen texts[19]).[20]
Selection of papers
"Schopenhauers Nirwana". In: Die Wahrheit ist nackt am schönsten. Arthur Schopenhauers philosophische Provokation, ed. by Michael Fleiter. Frankfurt: Institut für Stadtgeschichte / Societätsverlag, 2010, pp. 200-208.
"NICHTS. Das letzte Wort von Schopenhauers Hauptwerk". In: Das Tier, das du jetzt tötest, bist du selbst ... Arthur Schopenhauer und Indien, ed. by Jochen Stollberg. Frankfurt: Vittorio Klostermann, 2006, pp. 51–60.
"Die Entdeckung des Zen". In Homo Medietas. Aufsätze zu Religiosität, Literatur und Denkformen des Menschen vom Mittelalter bis in die Neuzeit, ed. by Claudia Brinker-von der Heyde. Bern: Peter Lang, 1999, pp. 13–26.
"St. Francis Xavier's Discovery of Japanese Buddhism. Part 1: Before the Arrival in Japan, 1547-1549". Eastern Buddhist 30, no. 1 (1997), pp. 53–78. "Part 2: From Kagoshima to Yamaguchi, 1549-1551.” Eastern Buddhist 30, no. 2 (1997), pp. 214–44. "Part 3: From Yamaguchi to India, 1551-1552.” Eastern Buddhist 31, no. 1 (1998), pp. 40–71.
"Wuxinlun -- The Treatise on No-Mind." Zenbunka kenkyūsho kiyō 21 (1995): pp. 1–68.
"Dun: A Chinese Concept as a Key to 'Mysticism' in East and West." The Eastern Buddhist Bd. XXVI No. 2 (Fall 1993), pp. 31–72.
"Reference Works for Chan Research. A selective annotated survey." Cahiers d’Extrême-Asie 7 (1993–94), pp. 357–409.
"The Making of a Chan Record". Zenbunka kenkyūjo kiyō (Annual Report from the Institute of Zen Studies) No. 17 (May 1991): 1–90.