Behind the stereotype of a solitary meditator closing his eyes to the world, meditation always takes place in close interaction with the surrounding culture. Meditation and Culture: The Interplay of Practice and Context explores cases in which the relation between meditative practice and cultural context is particularly complex. The internationally-renowned contributors discuss practices that travel from one culture to another, or are surrounded by competing cultures. They explore cultures that bring together competing practices, or that are themselves mosaics of elements of different origins. They seek to answer the question: What is the relationship between meditation and culture? The effects of meditation may arise from its symbolic value within larger webs of cultural meaning, as in the contextual view that still dominates cultural and religious studies. They may also be psychobiological responses to the practice itself, the cultural context merely acting as a catalyst for processes originating in the body and mind of the practitioner. Meditation and Culture gives no single definitive explanation, but taken together, the different viewpoints presented point to the complexity of the relationship.
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List of IllustrationsAcknowledgmentsList of ContributorsIntroduction 1 Meditative Practice and Cultural Context, Halvor EifringSection 1 Traveling Practices 2 The Daoist Adaptation of Buddhist Insight Meditation, Livia Kohn3 Ignatian Visual Meditation in Seventeenth-Century China, Nicolas Standaert4 Modern Meditation in the Context of Science, Øyvind Ellingsen and Are HolenSection 2 Competing Practices 5 Mindfulness and Mindlessness in Early Chán, Robert H. Sharf6 Reverence and Quietude in Neo-Confucianism, Rur-bin Yang7 Meditative Pluralism in Hanshan Déqing, Halvor EifringSection 3 Competing Cultures 8 The Hindi Sants’ Two Yogic Paths to the Formless Lord, Daniel Gold9 Inner Islamization in Java, Paul D. Stange10 Cinnabar-fi eld Meditation in Korea, Don BakerSection 4 Cultural Mosaics 11 Tibetan Chöd as Practiced by Ani Lochen Rinpoche, Hanna Havnevik12 Vedic Chanting as a Householder’s Meditation Practice in the Tamil Saiva Siddhanta Tradition, M. D. Muthukumaraswamy13 Spontaneous Thoughts in Meditative Traditions, Halvor EifringNotesReferencesIndex
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Eifring’s edited volume is an extraordinarily rich collection of essays, by some of the most prominent scholars of meditation theory and practice worldwide, which accomplishes even more than the book itself promises. Meditation emerges here as not simply a crucial influence on its ambient cultural contexts but as one of human civilization’s greatest cultural achievements in its own right.
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Explores a wide variety of traditional and contemporary forms of meditation in order to examine the complex relationship between meditative practice and cultural context.
Contributors are internationally-renowned specialists in the religions studied

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781350036260
Publisert
2017-03-23
Utgiver
Vendor
Bloomsbury Academic
Vekt
399 gr
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
280

Redaktør

Biographical note

Halvor Eifring is Professor of Chinese at the University of Oslo, Norway. He teaches Chinese language, literature and culture and directs an international research project on the cultural histories of meditation. He is General Secretary of Acem International School of Meditation.