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Tantric Buddhism in East Asia

PDF Tantric Buddhism in East Asia by From Brand: Wisdom Publications in History

Description

The Potato tells the story of how a humble vegetable; once regarded as trash food; had as revolutionary an impact on Western history as the railroad or the automobile. Using Ireland; England; France; and the United States as examples; Larry Zuckerman shows how daily life from the 1770s until World War I would have been unrecognizable-perhaps impossible-without the potato; which functioned as fast food; famine insurance; fuel and labor saver; budget stretcher; and bank loan; as well as delicacy. Drawing on personal diaries; contemporaneous newspaper accounts; and other primary sources; this is popular social history at its liveliest and most illuminating.


#1867106 in Books Wisdom Publications 2005-11-29 2005-11-29Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 9.00 x .90 x 6.00l; 1.05 #File Name: 0861714873320 pages


Review
18 of 22 people found the following review helpful. Tantric Buddhism in East AsiaBy Mysterium Ineffable"Tantric Buddhism is East Asia" is a welcome collection of essays on Vajrayana Buddhism and the many guises it takes in East Asia. As a casual reader of Buddhist texts I found it to be most enjoyable and recommend it as an introduction to the general climate of what has come to be known in the West as "tantric" Buddhism. The collection is edited by Richard Payne; a Western scholar of religion who happens to be an ordained Shingon priest; though you wouldn't know this from reading his introductory essay. It has some merit; but the author seems excessively spooked by what he sees as orientalist authoritarianism which mire classic Buddhist studies in the West. Without doubt modern philosophical currents shaped the study of Buddhism in the West and continues to do so for the most part to this day. Unfortunately Payne fails to see any "authoritarianism" in his thoroughly "Western academic" approach to the study Buddhism.As far as the essays are concerned it would be hard to single out the most important essays because they are all quite diverse and important in their own right. Those which appealed to me were James Stanford's "Breath of Life: The Esoteric Nembutsu"; H. Byron Earhart's "Shugendo; the Traditions of En no Gyoja and Mikkyo Influence"; Henrick Sorensen's "Esoteric Buddhism in Korea"; Hisao Inagaki's "Kukai's 'Principle of Attaining Buddhahood with the Present Body'"; and Ian Astley's "The Five Mysteries of Vajrasattva: A Buddhist Tantric View of the Passions and Enlightenment". I especially enjoyed the essay on Shugendo; a topic so rare in studies of Japanese religion; yet one of the most interesting for me personally because of its synthesis of Mikkyo and the indigenous mountain asceticism (sangaku shinko) of Japan.What makes this collection valuable is the scarcity of quality introductions to Vajrayana outside of the well-known Tibetan tradition and the extreme difficulty one finds in accessing the inner logic of Vajrayana; or more popularly "tantric" Buddhism. The essays here are by and large introductory yet scholarly rigorous and; in the case of Korean Esoteric Buddhism; the first of their kind that I've seen. This field is still opening up as interest in Vajrayana increases and as the prejudices which saw in Vajrayana a falling away from the purity of the "original Dharma" begin themselves to fall away.15 of 16 people found the following review helpful. Fine Collection of Fine ArticlesBy Crazy FoxDon't let the slightly New Age look of the cover fool you. This book consists of a number of articles all of high scholarly calibre. Except for the editor's introduction (which includes an interesting if slightly nitpicky consideration of the category "tantric" and other relevant terms); these articles have appeared before; but scattered in more or less inaccessible sources. To have them all easily available together here is a real godsend (so to speak). Also; and perhaps accidentally; a good balance is struck between studies of the esoteric tradition in its classical; clearly formulated aspect and explorations of its interaction and osmosis with other Buddhist traditions.By the way; the articles are:1. Tantrism in China (Chou Yi-Liang)2. Esoteric Buddhism in Korea (Henrik H. Sorensen)3. On Esoteric Practices in Korean Son Buddhism during the Choson Period (Henrik H. Sorensen)4. Kukai's "Principle of Attaining Buddhahood with the Present Body" (Hisao Inagaki)5. The Five Mysteries of Vajrasattva: A Buddhist Tantric View of the Passions and Enlightenment (Ian Astley)6. An Annotated Translation of the Pancabhisambodhi Practice of the Tattvasamgraha (Dale Todaro)7. The Twelve-Armed Deity Daisho Kongo and His Scriptural Sources (Pol Vanden Broucke)8. Breath of Life: The Esoteric Nenbutsu (James H. Sanford)9. Shugendo; the Traditions of En no Gyoja; and Mikkyo Influence (H. Byron Earhart)10. The Cave and the Womb World (Helen Hardacre)

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