An accessible, informative, and entertaining book on the complex rhetoric employed in Chan Buddhist circles to cast the figure of the Chan master as a full-fledged buddha. Buckelew makes a clear, judicious argument about the centrality of the trope of sovereignty in Chan discourse concerning the spiritual liberation and authority of masters.

- T. Griffith Foulk, editor in chief of <i>Record of the Transmission of Illumination</i>,

Buckelew’s brilliant study of masculinity in Chan Buddhism during the Song dynasty shows how Chan masters cultivating a martially masculine spiritual disposition led to the popularity of their version of Buddhism.

- Miriam Levering, author of <i>Zen: Images, Texts, and Teachings</i>,

With academic rigor and intellectual creativity, <i>Discerning Buddhas </i>ranks among the best new works in Chan studies. Buckelew’s research is terrifically original. His lucid translations and thoughtful analyses bring to life both familiar and previously unstudied Chan texts.

- Jason Protass, author of <i>The Poetry Demon: Song-Dynasty Monks on Verse and the Way</i>,

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How was it that Chan masters were taken to be buddhas in Song China? In answering this question, Kevin Buckelew shows both the immense sophistication the tradition demanded of its practitioners—as writers, readers, and ritual performers—and the complex workings of institutional power in Song Buddhism.

- Paul Copp, author of <i>The Body Incantatory: Spells and the Ritual Imagination in Medieval Chinese Buddhism </i>,

In Song-period China (960–1279 CE), masters in the Chan (Japanese Zen) school of Buddhism were presented as sources of religious authority on par with the Buddha, an almost unthinkably lofty status before the rise of Chan. This claim carried great rhetorical power, facilitating Chan’s appeal to Buddhist monastics and powerful patrons alike. But it also raised a challenging question for Chan Buddhists, who insisted that buddhahood properly transcends all worldly marks: By what signs could one recognize a Chan master as a buddha?

Discerning Buddhas argues that Chan Buddhists wove together tropes of sovereignty, hospitality, and martial heroism drawn from both Buddhist tradition and China’s cultural heritage to develop a distinctive vision of what it meant for a Chan master to be a buddha in Song-period China. Kevin Buckelew analyzes the ways Chan Buddhists deployed such tropes in ritual, literature, and visual culture in order to stage the comparison of Chan mastery with buddhahood. He examines how they used the concept of buddhahood to work through questions about the ideal Chan master’s authority, agency, and masculinity, in the process rendering buddhahood in terms highly legible to elite Chinese society.

Chan Buddhists, Buckelew shows, developed their own “signature” of buddhahood, according to which enlightened Chan masters who truly deserved comparison to the Buddha were supposed to be distinguished from everyone else. By exploring the resulting Chan culture of discernment, which raised fundamental questions about Buddhist authority at a pivotal inflection point in Chinese history, this book offers fresh insight into the place of Buddhism in Chinese society.
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Discerning Buddhas argues that Chan Buddhists wove together tropes of sovereignty, hospitality, and martial heroism drawn from both Buddhist tradition and China’s cultural heritage to develop a distinctive vision of what it meant for a Chan master to be a buddha in Song-period China.
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Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Signs of Authority and the “Marks of a Great Man”
2. Great Manhood and Martial Masculinity
3. Sovereign Authority and Violence
4. Sovereign Selfhood and Agency
5. Chan Hospitality
Conclusion: A Discerning Age
Conventions
Abbreviations
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780231214254
Publisert
2024-11-19
Utgiver
Vendor
Columbia University Press
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
384

Forfatter

Biographical note

Kevin Buckelew is assistant professor of religious studies at Northwestern University. He is coeditor of Buddhist Masculinities (Columbia, 2023).