Description

Book Synopsis
In the early fifteenth century, two Tibetan monks debated how to transform the body ritually into a celestial palace inhabited by buddhas. Searching for the Body demonstrates the significance of this debate for understandings of Tibetan Buddhism as well as conversations on representation and embodiment occurring across the disciplines today.

Trade Review
Searching for the Body uses a famous fifteenth-century Tibetan debate about a tantric ritual practice called body mandala to explore historical and literary questions that show the relevance of that debate to the broader field of the humanities. Dachille’s knowledge of the Tibetan texts is superb, and her analysis of the body mandala debate is a major contribution to the field. -- José Ignacio Cabezón, author of Sexuality in Classical South Asian Buddhism
Rae Dachille makes exemplary use of exegetical practices drawn from trans, queer, Black, and disability studies to enable a posthumanist, and more-than-human, interpretative stance within Buddhism. She critically reframes the ways Buddhist authors can understand how reference, citation, and representation work in Buddhist texts and traditions, expanding our understanding of the ever-shifting boundaries between self, others, and world. This is a smart, beautiful, and timely work. -- Susan Stryker, executive editor, TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly
This insightful, well-researched, and original book will ideally appeal to readers who have at least a background in Tibetan Buddhism and care about contemporary social matters. * Religious Studies Review *
A clear and comprehensive contribution to the field. * Religion *

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
A Technical Note
Introduction
1. Imagining the Body Mandala
2. Constructing the Body Mandala Debate
3. “Cutting the Ground”: Citations Revealing Mandala Iconography in the Making
4. Ngorchen’s Armor of Citations: Defending and Delineating the Hevajra Corpus
5. “Aligning the Dependently Arisen Connections”: The Exegete Rearticulates Body and Text
Conclusion
Epilogue
Appendixes
Notes
Bibliography
Index

Searching for the Body

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    A Paperback / softback by Rae Erin Dachille

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      Publisher: Columbia University Press
      Publication Date: 25/10/2022
      ISBN13: 9780231206099, 978-0231206099
      ISBN10: 0231206097

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      In the early fifteenth century, two Tibetan monks debated how to transform the body ritually into a celestial palace inhabited by buddhas. Searching for the Body demonstrates the significance of this debate for understandings of Tibetan Buddhism as well as conversations on representation and embodiment occurring across the disciplines today.

      Trade Review
      Searching for the Body uses a famous fifteenth-century Tibetan debate about a tantric ritual practice called body mandala to explore historical and literary questions that show the relevance of that debate to the broader field of the humanities. Dachille’s knowledge of the Tibetan texts is superb, and her analysis of the body mandala debate is a major contribution to the field. -- José Ignacio Cabezón, author of Sexuality in Classical South Asian Buddhism
      Rae Dachille makes exemplary use of exegetical practices drawn from trans, queer, Black, and disability studies to enable a posthumanist, and more-than-human, interpretative stance within Buddhism. She critically reframes the ways Buddhist authors can understand how reference, citation, and representation work in Buddhist texts and traditions, expanding our understanding of the ever-shifting boundaries between self, others, and world. This is a smart, beautiful, and timely work. -- Susan Stryker, executive editor, TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly
      This insightful, well-researched, and original book will ideally appeal to readers who have at least a background in Tibetan Buddhism and care about contemporary social matters. * Religious Studies Review *
      A clear and comprehensive contribution to the field. * Religion *

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments
      A Technical Note
      Introduction
      1. Imagining the Body Mandala
      2. Constructing the Body Mandala Debate
      3. “Cutting the Ground”: Citations Revealing Mandala Iconography in the Making
      4. Ngorchen’s Armor of Citations: Defending and Delineating the Hevajra Corpus
      5. “Aligning the Dependently Arisen Connections”: The Exegete Rearticulates Body and Text
      Conclusion
      Epilogue
      Appendixes
      Notes
      Bibliography
      Index

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