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Thus I Have Seen: Visualizing Faith in Early Indian Buddhism [Kõva köide]

(, Assistant Professor, Smith College, Northampton, MA)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 336 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 236x155x25 mm, kaal: 599 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 25-Dec-2008
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0195366158
  • ISBN-13: 9780195366150
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    • Oxford Scholarship Online e-raamatud
  • Formaat: Hardback, 336 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 236x155x25 mm, kaal: 599 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 25-Dec-2008
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0195366158
  • ISBN-13: 9780195366150
Although Buddhism is often depicted as a religion of meditators and philosophers, some of the earliest writings extant in India offer a very different portrait of the Buddhist practitioner. In Indian Buddhist narratives from the early centuries of the Common Era, most lay religious practice consists not of reading, praying, or meditating, but of visually engaging with certain kinds of objects. These visual practices, moreover, are represented as the primary means of cultivating faith, a necessary precondition for proceeding along the Buddhist spiritual path. In Thus Have I Seen: Visualizing Faith in Early Indian Buddhism, Andy Rotman examines these visual practices and how they function as a kind of skeleton key for opening up Buddhist conceptualizations about the world and the ways it should be navigated.
Rotman's analysis is based primarily on stories from the Divyavadana (Divine Stories), one of the most important collections of ancient Buddhist narratives from India. Though discourses of the Buddha are well known for their opening words, "thus have I heard" - for Buddhist teachings were first preserved and transmitted orally - the Divyavadana presents a very different model for disseminating the Buddhist dharma. Devotees are enjoined to look, not just hear, and visual legacies and lineages are shown to trump their oral counterparts. As Rotman makes clear, this configuration of the visual fundamentally transforms the world of the Buddhist practitioner, changing what one sees, what one believes, and what one does.

Arvustused

This book is a significant contribution to the field of Buddhist Studies on at least three counts: it explores the neglected literary genre of Sanskrit legends (the ?vad?nas, in particular the collection known as the Divy?vad?na); in so doing, it emphasizes the importance of the visual dimensions of the experience of the Buddha, in contradistinction to the aural (Thus Have I Seen instead of Thus Have I Heard); and it unpacks various typologies of Buddhist faith and devotion, paying attention to their experiential but also their sociological contexts. I highly recommend this work to anyone interested in the religious dimensions of Indian Buddhism. * John Strong, Bates College *

Introduction 3(20)
Part I The Practice of Sraddha
Seeing and Knowing
23(16)
Getting and Giving
39(26)
Part II The Practice of Prasada
Agency and Intentionality
65(24)
Participation and Exclusion
89(24)
Proximity and Presence
113(16)
Politics and Aesthetics
129(22)
Part III Seeing the Buddha
Past and Present
151(26)
Images and Imagination
177(134)
Epilogue
197(6)
Appendix: Contents of the Divyavadana
203(2)
Abbreviations
205(4)
Notes
209(72)
Bibliography
281(30)
Index
311
Assistant Professor, Department of Religion, Smith College