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Genealogies of Mah¿y¿na Buddhism offers a solution to the monumental problem that some have called the "holy grail" of Buddhist studies: the problem of the "origins" of Mah¿y¿na Buddhism. As much as it contributes to a theory of origins for religious studies and Buddhist Studies, the book argues that that it is the neglect of political power in the scholarly imagination of Buddhism in history that has made the origins of Mah¿y¿na an intractable problem. Walser challenges commonly-held assumptions, offering a fascinating new take on the genealogy of Mah¿y¿na that traces its doctrines of…mehr
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Genealogies of Mah¿y¿na Buddhism offers a solution to the monumental problem that some have called the "holy grail" of Buddhist studies: the problem of the "origins" of Mah¿y¿na Buddhism. As much as it contributes to a theory of origins for religious studies and Buddhist Studies, the book argues that that it is the neglect of political power in the scholarly imagination of Buddhism in history that has made the origins of Mah¿y¿na an intractable problem. Walser challenges commonly-held assumptions, offering a fascinating new take on the genealogy of Mah¿y¿na that traces its doctrines of emptiness and mind-only from the present day back to the time before Mah¿y¿na was "Mah¿y¿na."
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 306
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. Juni 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 21mm
- Gewicht: 625g
- ISBN-13: 9781138955554
- ISBN-10: 1138955558
- Artikelnr.: 43676321
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 306
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. Juni 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 21mm
- Gewicht: 625g
- ISBN-13: 9781138955554
- ISBN-10: 1138955558
- Artikelnr.: 43676321
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Joseph Walser is Associate Professor of Religion at Tufts University, USA.
Acknowledgements Part I: Genealogies of Mah
y
na 1. Introduction: On Origins and Genealogies 2. Mah
y
na in Retrospect: From My House to the Dalai Lama (looking back from 2017 - 1930) 1. Assessing the Essence 2. Tibet as Buddhist: Tracing the Lines of Power 3. Emptiness and the Analytic of Power 4. Inculcating Dispositions to Authority: the K
lacakra 3. Mah
y
na in the Republic, Mah
y
na in the Empire: Tracing "Religion" from Republican China to the Early Qing Dynasty (1920's - 1723) 1. Religion vs. Superstition in 20th Century East Asia 2. The Fin de Siècle Turning Point 3. The Qing Imperium and the Usefulness of Mah
y
na 4. The Yonghegong Temple in Beijing and the Political Work of Monuments 5. Emperor Qianlong: the Tantric Initiate and the Tantric State 6. Tantra, Emptiness and the Reincarnate Emperor/Lama, or why it's never too late to have a venerable past. 7. Yongzheng Emperor and the Great Ming Debate 4. The Image of Emptiness across the Landscape of Power (China: 11th Cent. B.C.E - 15th Cent. C.E.) 1. The Ancestor Image 2. The Image of Emptiness: Di, Space and the Celestial Pole 3. The Image of the Earth and control of the cults 4. Exorcism and the State: When possession is nine-tenths 5. Religion in the Service of Taxation 6. Buddhist Exorcism and the Heart of Mah
y
na 7. Conclusion 5. Buddha Veda: an Indian Genealogy of Emptiness (20th century - 6th century CE.) 1. Emptiness and Power in Orissa: From Mahima Dharma Samprad
ya to Jagann
tha of Puri 2. Buddhism and Brahmanism in Maitr
pa (ca. 1010-1097 CE) 3. Bh
viveka's 6th Century Mah
y
na 4. Bh
viveka, Mah
y
na and Yog
c
ra 5. Bh
viveka, Mah
y
na and Brahmanism 6. Preliminary Conclusion Part II: The Genealogy of the Perfection of Wisdom 6. What did the text of the Perfection of Wisdom look like? 7. The Versions 8. The Quest for the Ur-S
tra 9. The Core Pericope 10. The Ending 11. Subh
ti's Non-Apprehension 12. The Mindlessness Section 13. The Message of the Original Perfection of Wisdom 1. Mah
y
na 2. Bodhisattvas 3. What's missing? 14. Mah
y
na S
tra as Palimpsest: Discerning Traces of the Tripi
aka 15. Beyond "origin" as mere event 16. Heteroglossia and Textual Rationale 17. Intertextuality and Adaptation in Buddhist Literature 18. The Non-Apprehension section and its Intertexts 1. Sermon on Selflessness? 2. Nominalism? 3. Cessation of Cognition 4. Selflessness... but differently 5. The Perfected as Untraceable 6. Fearlessness 7. Abhidharma echoes 8. Conclusion: The Perfection of Wisdom 19. Palimpsest Part Two: Brahmanical Writings on the Tripi
aka 1. The Importance of Incoherence 2. The Context of Abhidharma Literature? 3. The Context of Other Schools? 4. The Context of Luminous Thought and Varieties of Unaware Thought 5. The Context of Acitta Neither Existing nor Not Existing as Anti-Brahmanical Dependent Origination 6. The Context of Absence of Mental Construction (avikalpa) 7. Nirvikapla 8. Brahmanical Intertexts and their Implications 20. Placing Early Mah
y
na 1. Placing the Perfection of Wisdom in the Early Mah
y
na Suite 2. Mañju
r
's Inquiry Concerning the Office of the Bodhisattva 3. Placing the Early Perfection of Wisdom 4. Mistaken Sounds 5. Subh
ti's Aräavih
ra: Preaching or Penetration? 6. Emptiness, Brahmin Nuns, Tulkus and the Power of Possession 7. Putting it together 8. Conclusion 21. On Sites and Stakes: Meditation on Emptiness and Imperial Aspirations 1. Shifting Contexts, Shifting Interpretations 2. The U
bhabr
hmäasutta and the B
had
räyaka Upani
ad on cosmic foundations 3. The Horse Sacrifice 4. Piling the Fire Altar and Legitimation Regress 5. Buddhist Brahmins 6. On Power and Reproduction 7. Sovereign Echoes: on Manhood and Celibacy; On thrones and Crowns 8. Buddhist Brahmodya as court debates 9. The Mah
y
na Genealogy from The Vedas to the Sutras to Tantra to Zen Index
y
na 1. Introduction: On Origins and Genealogies 2. Mah
y
na in Retrospect: From My House to the Dalai Lama (looking back from 2017 - 1930) 1. Assessing the Essence 2. Tibet as Buddhist: Tracing the Lines of Power 3. Emptiness and the Analytic of Power 4. Inculcating Dispositions to Authority: the K
lacakra 3. Mah
y
na in the Republic, Mah
y
na in the Empire: Tracing "Religion" from Republican China to the Early Qing Dynasty (1920's - 1723) 1. Religion vs. Superstition in 20th Century East Asia 2. The Fin de Siècle Turning Point 3. The Qing Imperium and the Usefulness of Mah
y
na 4. The Yonghegong Temple in Beijing and the Political Work of Monuments 5. Emperor Qianlong: the Tantric Initiate and the Tantric State 6. Tantra, Emptiness and the Reincarnate Emperor/Lama, or why it's never too late to have a venerable past. 7. Yongzheng Emperor and the Great Ming Debate 4. The Image of Emptiness across the Landscape of Power (China: 11th Cent. B.C.E - 15th Cent. C.E.) 1. The Ancestor Image 2. The Image of Emptiness: Di, Space and the Celestial Pole 3. The Image of the Earth and control of the cults 4. Exorcism and the State: When possession is nine-tenths 5. Religion in the Service of Taxation 6. Buddhist Exorcism and the Heart of Mah
y
na 7. Conclusion 5. Buddha Veda: an Indian Genealogy of Emptiness (20th century - 6th century CE.) 1. Emptiness and Power in Orissa: From Mahima Dharma Samprad
ya to Jagann
tha of Puri 2. Buddhism and Brahmanism in Maitr
pa (ca. 1010-1097 CE) 3. Bh
viveka's 6th Century Mah
y
na 4. Bh
viveka, Mah
y
na and Yog
c
ra 5. Bh
viveka, Mah
y
na and Brahmanism 6. Preliminary Conclusion Part II: The Genealogy of the Perfection of Wisdom 6. What did the text of the Perfection of Wisdom look like? 7. The Versions 8. The Quest for the Ur-S
tra 9. The Core Pericope 10. The Ending 11. Subh
ti's Non-Apprehension 12. The Mindlessness Section 13. The Message of the Original Perfection of Wisdom 1. Mah
y
na 2. Bodhisattvas 3. What's missing? 14. Mah
y
na S
tra as Palimpsest: Discerning Traces of the Tripi
aka 15. Beyond "origin" as mere event 16. Heteroglossia and Textual Rationale 17. Intertextuality and Adaptation in Buddhist Literature 18. The Non-Apprehension section and its Intertexts 1. Sermon on Selflessness? 2. Nominalism? 3. Cessation of Cognition 4. Selflessness... but differently 5. The Perfected as Untraceable 6. Fearlessness 7. Abhidharma echoes 8. Conclusion: The Perfection of Wisdom 19. Palimpsest Part Two: Brahmanical Writings on the Tripi
aka 1. The Importance of Incoherence 2. The Context of Abhidharma Literature? 3. The Context of Other Schools? 4. The Context of Luminous Thought and Varieties of Unaware Thought 5. The Context of Acitta Neither Existing nor Not Existing as Anti-Brahmanical Dependent Origination 6. The Context of Absence of Mental Construction (avikalpa) 7. Nirvikapla 8. Brahmanical Intertexts and their Implications 20. Placing Early Mah
y
na 1. Placing the Perfection of Wisdom in the Early Mah
y
na Suite 2. Mañju
r
's Inquiry Concerning the Office of the Bodhisattva 3. Placing the Early Perfection of Wisdom 4. Mistaken Sounds 5. Subh
ti's Aräavih
ra: Preaching or Penetration? 6. Emptiness, Brahmin Nuns, Tulkus and the Power of Possession 7. Putting it together 8. Conclusion 21. On Sites and Stakes: Meditation on Emptiness and Imperial Aspirations 1. Shifting Contexts, Shifting Interpretations 2. The U
bhabr
hmäasutta and the B
had
räyaka Upani
ad on cosmic foundations 3. The Horse Sacrifice 4. Piling the Fire Altar and Legitimation Regress 5. Buddhist Brahmins 6. On Power and Reproduction 7. Sovereign Echoes: on Manhood and Celibacy; On thrones and Crowns 8. Buddhist Brahmodya as court debates 9. The Mah
y
na Genealogy from The Vedas to the Sutras to Tantra to Zen Index
Acknowledgements
Part I: Genealogies of Mahayana
- Introduction: On Origins and Genealogies
- Mahayana in Retrospect: From My House to the Dalai Lama (looking back from 2017 - 1930)
- Assessing the Essence
- Tibet as Buddhist: Tracing the Lines of Power
- Emptiness and the Analytic of Power
- Inculcating Dispositions to Authority: the Kalacakra
- Mahayana in the Republic, Mahayana in the Empire: Tracing "Religion" from Republican China to the Early Qing Dynasty (1920's - 1723)
- Religion vs. Superstition in 20th Century East Asia
- The Fin de Siècle Turning Point
- The Qing Imperium and the Usefulness of Mahayana
- The Yonghegong Temple in Beijing and the Political Work of Monuments
- Emperor Qianlong: the Tantric Initiate and the Tantric State
- Tantra, Emptiness and the Reincarnate Emperor/Lama, or why it's never too late to have a venerable past.
- Yongzheng Emperor and the Great Ming Debate
- The Image of Emptiness across the Landscape of Power (China: 11th Cent. B.C.E - 15th Cent. C.E.)
- The Ancestor Image
- The Image of Emptiness: Di, Space and the Celestial Pole
- The Image of the Earth and control of the cults
- Exorcism and the State: When possession is nine-tenths
- Religion in the Service of Taxation
- Buddhist Exorcism and the Heart of Mahayana
- Conclusion
- Buddha Veda: an Indian Genealogy of Emptiness (20th century - 6th century CE.)
- Emptiness and Power in Orissa: From Mahima Dharma Sampradaya to Jagannatha of Puri
- Buddhism and Brahmanism in Maitripa (ca. 1010-1097 CE)
- Bhaviveka's 6th Century Mahayana
- Bhaviveka, Mahayana and Yogacara
- Bhaviveka, Mahayana and Brahmanism
- Preliminary Conclusion
- What did the text of the Perfection of Wisdom look like?
- The Versions
- The Quest for the Ur-Sutra
- The Core Pericope
- The Ending
- Subhuti's Non-Apprehension
- The Mindlessness Section
- The Message of the Original Perfection of Wisdom
- Mahayana
- Bodhisattvas
- What's missing?
- Mahayana Sutra as Palimpsest: Discerning Traces of the Tripi aka
- Beyond "origin" as mere event
- Heteroglossia and Textual Rationale
- Intertextuality and Adaptation in Buddhist Literature
- The Non-Apprehension section and its Intertexts
- Sermon on Selflessness?
- Nominalism?
- Cessation of Cognition
- Selflessness... but differently
- The Perfected as Untraceable
- Fearlessness
- Abhidharma echoes
- Conclusion: The Perfection of Wisdom
- Palimpsest Part Two: Brahmanical Writings on the Tripi aka
- The Importance of Incoherence
- The Context of Abhidharma Literature?
- The Context of Other Schools?
- The Context of Luminous Thought and Varieties of Unaware Thought
- The Context of Acitta Neither Existing nor Not Existing as Anti-Brahmanical Dependent Origination
- The Context of Absence of Mental Construction (avikalpa)
- Nirvikapla
- Brahmanical Intertexts and their Implications
- Placing Early Mahayana
- Placing the Perfection of Wisdom in the Early Mahayana Suite
- Mañjusri's Inquiry Concerning the Office of the Bodhisattva
- Placing the Early Perfection of Wisdom
- Mistaken Sounds
- Subhuti's Aranavihara: Preaching or Penetration?
- Emptiness, Brahmin Nuns, Tulkus and the Power of Possession
- Putting it together
- Conclusion
- On Sites and Stakes: Meditation on Emptiness and Imperial Aspirations
- Shifting Contexts, Shifting Interpretations
- The Unnabhabrahmanasutta and the Brhadaranyaka Upani ad on cosmic foundations
- The Horse Sacrifice
- Piling the Fire Altar and Legitimation Regress
- Buddhist Brahmins
- On Power and Reproduction
- Sovereign Echoes: on Manhood and Celibacy; On thrones and Crowns
- Buddhist Brahmodya as court debates
- The Mahayana Genealogy from The Vedas to the Sutras to Tantra to Zen
Part II: The Genealogy of the Perfection of Wisdom
Index
Acknowledgements Part I: Genealogies of Mah
y
na 1. Introduction: On Origins and Genealogies 2. Mah
y
na in Retrospect: From My House to the Dalai Lama (looking back from 2017 - 1930) 1. Assessing the Essence 2. Tibet as Buddhist: Tracing the Lines of Power 3. Emptiness and the Analytic of Power 4. Inculcating Dispositions to Authority: the K
lacakra 3. Mah
y
na in the Republic, Mah
y
na in the Empire: Tracing "Religion" from Republican China to the Early Qing Dynasty (1920's - 1723) 1. Religion vs. Superstition in 20th Century East Asia 2. The Fin de Siècle Turning Point 3. The Qing Imperium and the Usefulness of Mah
y
na 4. The Yonghegong Temple in Beijing and the Political Work of Monuments 5. Emperor Qianlong: the Tantric Initiate and the Tantric State 6. Tantra, Emptiness and the Reincarnate Emperor/Lama, or why it's never too late to have a venerable past. 7. Yongzheng Emperor and the Great Ming Debate 4. The Image of Emptiness across the Landscape of Power (China: 11th Cent. B.C.E - 15th Cent. C.E.) 1. The Ancestor Image 2. The Image of Emptiness: Di, Space and the Celestial Pole 3. The Image of the Earth and control of the cults 4. Exorcism and the State: When possession is nine-tenths 5. Religion in the Service of Taxation 6. Buddhist Exorcism and the Heart of Mah
y
na 7. Conclusion 5. Buddha Veda: an Indian Genealogy of Emptiness (20th century - 6th century CE.) 1. Emptiness and Power in Orissa: From Mahima Dharma Samprad
ya to Jagann
tha of Puri 2. Buddhism and Brahmanism in Maitr
pa (ca. 1010-1097 CE) 3. Bh
viveka's 6th Century Mah
y
na 4. Bh
viveka, Mah
y
na and Yog
c
ra 5. Bh
viveka, Mah
y
na and Brahmanism 6. Preliminary Conclusion Part II: The Genealogy of the Perfection of Wisdom 6. What did the text of the Perfection of Wisdom look like? 7. The Versions 8. The Quest for the Ur-S
tra 9. The Core Pericope 10. The Ending 11. Subh
ti's Non-Apprehension 12. The Mindlessness Section 13. The Message of the Original Perfection of Wisdom 1. Mah
y
na 2. Bodhisattvas 3. What's missing? 14. Mah
y
na S
tra as Palimpsest: Discerning Traces of the Tripi
aka 15. Beyond "origin" as mere event 16. Heteroglossia and Textual Rationale 17. Intertextuality and Adaptation in Buddhist Literature 18. The Non-Apprehension section and its Intertexts 1. Sermon on Selflessness? 2. Nominalism? 3. Cessation of Cognition 4. Selflessness... but differently 5. The Perfected as Untraceable 6. Fearlessness 7. Abhidharma echoes 8. Conclusion: The Perfection of Wisdom 19. Palimpsest Part Two: Brahmanical Writings on the Tripi
aka 1. The Importance of Incoherence 2. The Context of Abhidharma Literature? 3. The Context of Other Schools? 4. The Context of Luminous Thought and Varieties of Unaware Thought 5. The Context of Acitta Neither Existing nor Not Existing as Anti-Brahmanical Dependent Origination 6. The Context of Absence of Mental Construction (avikalpa) 7. Nirvikapla 8. Brahmanical Intertexts and their Implications 20. Placing Early Mah
y
na 1. Placing the Perfection of Wisdom in the Early Mah
y
na Suite 2. Mañju
r
's Inquiry Concerning the Office of the Bodhisattva 3. Placing the Early Perfection of Wisdom 4. Mistaken Sounds 5. Subh
ti's Aräavih
ra: Preaching or Penetration? 6. Emptiness, Brahmin Nuns, Tulkus and the Power of Possession 7. Putting it together 8. Conclusion 21. On Sites and Stakes: Meditation on Emptiness and Imperial Aspirations 1. Shifting Contexts, Shifting Interpretations 2. The U
bhabr
hmäasutta and the B
had
räyaka Upani
ad on cosmic foundations 3. The Horse Sacrifice 4. Piling the Fire Altar and Legitimation Regress 5. Buddhist Brahmins 6. On Power and Reproduction 7. Sovereign Echoes: on Manhood and Celibacy; On thrones and Crowns 8. Buddhist Brahmodya as court debates 9. The Mah
y
na Genealogy from The Vedas to the Sutras to Tantra to Zen Index
y
na 1. Introduction: On Origins and Genealogies 2. Mah
y
na in Retrospect: From My House to the Dalai Lama (looking back from 2017 - 1930) 1. Assessing the Essence 2. Tibet as Buddhist: Tracing the Lines of Power 3. Emptiness and the Analytic of Power 4. Inculcating Dispositions to Authority: the K
lacakra 3. Mah
y
na in the Republic, Mah
y
na in the Empire: Tracing "Religion" from Republican China to the Early Qing Dynasty (1920's - 1723) 1. Religion vs. Superstition in 20th Century East Asia 2. The Fin de Siècle Turning Point 3. The Qing Imperium and the Usefulness of Mah
y
na 4. The Yonghegong Temple in Beijing and the Political Work of Monuments 5. Emperor Qianlong: the Tantric Initiate and the Tantric State 6. Tantra, Emptiness and the Reincarnate Emperor/Lama, or why it's never too late to have a venerable past. 7. Yongzheng Emperor and the Great Ming Debate 4. The Image of Emptiness across the Landscape of Power (China: 11th Cent. B.C.E - 15th Cent. C.E.) 1. The Ancestor Image 2. The Image of Emptiness: Di, Space and the Celestial Pole 3. The Image of the Earth and control of the cults 4. Exorcism and the State: When possession is nine-tenths 5. Religion in the Service of Taxation 6. Buddhist Exorcism and the Heart of Mah
y
na 7. Conclusion 5. Buddha Veda: an Indian Genealogy of Emptiness (20th century - 6th century CE.) 1. Emptiness and Power in Orissa: From Mahima Dharma Samprad
ya to Jagann
tha of Puri 2. Buddhism and Brahmanism in Maitr
pa (ca. 1010-1097 CE) 3. Bh
viveka's 6th Century Mah
y
na 4. Bh
viveka, Mah
y
na and Yog
c
ra 5. Bh
viveka, Mah
y
na and Brahmanism 6. Preliminary Conclusion Part II: The Genealogy of the Perfection of Wisdom 6. What did the text of the Perfection of Wisdom look like? 7. The Versions 8. The Quest for the Ur-S
tra 9. The Core Pericope 10. The Ending 11. Subh
ti's Non-Apprehension 12. The Mindlessness Section 13. The Message of the Original Perfection of Wisdom 1. Mah
y
na 2. Bodhisattvas 3. What's missing? 14. Mah
y
na S
tra as Palimpsest: Discerning Traces of the Tripi
aka 15. Beyond "origin" as mere event 16. Heteroglossia and Textual Rationale 17. Intertextuality and Adaptation in Buddhist Literature 18. The Non-Apprehension section and its Intertexts 1. Sermon on Selflessness? 2. Nominalism? 3. Cessation of Cognition 4. Selflessness... but differently 5. The Perfected as Untraceable 6. Fearlessness 7. Abhidharma echoes 8. Conclusion: The Perfection of Wisdom 19. Palimpsest Part Two: Brahmanical Writings on the Tripi
aka 1. The Importance of Incoherence 2. The Context of Abhidharma Literature? 3. The Context of Other Schools? 4. The Context of Luminous Thought and Varieties of Unaware Thought 5. The Context of Acitta Neither Existing nor Not Existing as Anti-Brahmanical Dependent Origination 6. The Context of Absence of Mental Construction (avikalpa) 7. Nirvikapla 8. Brahmanical Intertexts and their Implications 20. Placing Early Mah
y
na 1. Placing the Perfection of Wisdom in the Early Mah
y
na Suite 2. Mañju
r
's Inquiry Concerning the Office of the Bodhisattva 3. Placing the Early Perfection of Wisdom 4. Mistaken Sounds 5. Subh
ti's Aräavih
ra: Preaching or Penetration? 6. Emptiness, Brahmin Nuns, Tulkus and the Power of Possession 7. Putting it together 8. Conclusion 21. On Sites and Stakes: Meditation on Emptiness and Imperial Aspirations 1. Shifting Contexts, Shifting Interpretations 2. The U
bhabr
hmäasutta and the B
had
räyaka Upani
ad on cosmic foundations 3. The Horse Sacrifice 4. Piling the Fire Altar and Legitimation Regress 5. Buddhist Brahmins 6. On Power and Reproduction 7. Sovereign Echoes: on Manhood and Celibacy; On thrones and Crowns 8. Buddhist Brahmodya as court debates 9. The Mah
y
na Genealogy from The Vedas to the Sutras to Tantra to Zen Index
Acknowledgements
Part I: Genealogies of Mahayana
- Introduction: On Origins and Genealogies
- Mahayana in Retrospect: From My House to the Dalai Lama (looking back from 2017 - 1930)
- Assessing the Essence
- Tibet as Buddhist: Tracing the Lines of Power
- Emptiness and the Analytic of Power
- Inculcating Dispositions to Authority: the Kalacakra
- Mahayana in the Republic, Mahayana in the Empire: Tracing "Religion" from Republican China to the Early Qing Dynasty (1920's - 1723)
- Religion vs. Superstition in 20th Century East Asia
- The Fin de Siècle Turning Point
- The Qing Imperium and the Usefulness of Mahayana
- The Yonghegong Temple in Beijing and the Political Work of Monuments
- Emperor Qianlong: the Tantric Initiate and the Tantric State
- Tantra, Emptiness and the Reincarnate Emperor/Lama, or why it's never too late to have a venerable past.
- Yongzheng Emperor and the Great Ming Debate
- The Image of Emptiness across the Landscape of Power (China: 11th Cent. B.C.E - 15th Cent. C.E.)
- The Ancestor Image
- The Image of Emptiness: Di, Space and the Celestial Pole
- The Image of the Earth and control of the cults
- Exorcism and the State: When possession is nine-tenths
- Religion in the Service of Taxation
- Buddhist Exorcism and the Heart of Mahayana
- Conclusion
- Buddha Veda: an Indian Genealogy of Emptiness (20th century - 6th century CE.)
- Emptiness and Power in Orissa: From Mahima Dharma Sampradaya to Jagannatha of Puri
- Buddhism and Brahmanism in Maitripa (ca. 1010-1097 CE)
- Bhaviveka's 6th Century Mahayana
- Bhaviveka, Mahayana and Yogacara
- Bhaviveka, Mahayana and Brahmanism
- Preliminary Conclusion
- What did the text of the Perfection of Wisdom look like?
- The Versions
- The Quest for the Ur-Sutra
- The Core Pericope
- The Ending
- Subhuti's Non-Apprehension
- The Mindlessness Section
- The Message of the Original Perfection of Wisdom
- Mahayana
- Bodhisattvas
- What's missing?
- Mahayana Sutra as Palimpsest: Discerning Traces of the Tripi aka
- Beyond "origin" as mere event
- Heteroglossia and Textual Rationale
- Intertextuality and Adaptation in Buddhist Literature
- The Non-Apprehension section and its Intertexts
- Sermon on Selflessness?
- Nominalism?
- Cessation of Cognition
- Selflessness... but differently
- The Perfected as Untraceable
- Fearlessness
- Abhidharma echoes
- Conclusion: The Perfection of Wisdom
- Palimpsest Part Two: Brahmanical Writings on the Tripi aka
- The Importance of Incoherence
- The Context of Abhidharma Literature?
- The Context of Other Schools?
- The Context of Luminous Thought and Varieties of Unaware Thought
- The Context of Acitta Neither Existing nor Not Existing as Anti-Brahmanical Dependent Origination
- The Context of Absence of Mental Construction (avikalpa)
- Nirvikapla
- Brahmanical Intertexts and their Implications
- Placing Early Mahayana
- Placing the Perfection of Wisdom in the Early Mahayana Suite
- Mañjusri's Inquiry Concerning the Office of the Bodhisattva
- Placing the Early Perfection of Wisdom
- Mistaken Sounds
- Subhuti's Aranavihara: Preaching or Penetration?
- Emptiness, Brahmin Nuns, Tulkus and the Power of Possession
- Putting it together
- Conclusion
- On Sites and Stakes: Meditation on Emptiness and Imperial Aspirations
- Shifting Contexts, Shifting Interpretations
- The Unnabhabrahmanasutta and the Brhadaranyaka Upani ad on cosmic foundations
- The Horse Sacrifice
- Piling the Fire Altar and Legitimation Regress
- Buddhist Brahmins
- On Power and Reproduction
- Sovereign Echoes: on Manhood and Celibacy; On thrones and Crowns
- Buddhist Brahmodya as court debates
- The Mahayana Genealogy from The Vedas to the Sutras to Tantra to Zen
Part II: The Genealogy of the Perfection of Wisdom
Index
"This book is a compelling argument to rethink the origins of Mahayana Buddhism. Approaching this perennial puzzle within Buddhist Studies from a different angle, tracing it from the present toward its genesis, Walser masterfully draws together material from a broad and complex cultural context to rethink the approach to understanding the earliest expressions of the idea of emptiness". Matthew Sayers, Lebanon Valley College Annville, USA.
"A bold new theory of what the Mahayana is and how it "began," Genealogies of Mahayana Buddhism is a paradigm shift in our understanding of one of the most important traditions of Buddhism. Written in clear and accessible prose, Walser's work is essential reading for anyone interested in the history of Buddhist thought." José Ignacio Cabezón, Dalai Lama Professor of Tibetan Buddhism and Cultural Studies, UC Santa Barbara, USA.
"A bold new theory of what the Mahayana is and how it "began," Genealogies of Mahayana Buddhism is a paradigm shift in our understanding of one of the most important traditions of Buddhism. Written in clear and accessible prose, Walser's work is essential reading for anyone interested in the history of Buddhist thought." José Ignacio Cabezón, Dalai Lama Professor of Tibetan Buddhism and Cultural Studies, UC Santa Barbara, USA.







