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Tibetan Sky-Gazing Meditation and the Pre-History of Great Perfection Buddhism
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 239

Tibetan Sky-Gazing Meditation and the Pre-History of Great Perfection Buddhism

"This book offers the first comprehensive introduction to the famous and secret Tibetan sky-gazing meditation known as "Skullward Leap" "--

The Life and Work of Ernesto De Martino
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 213

The Life and Work of Ernesto De Martino

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2021-08-09
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  • Publisher: BRILL

The Life and Work of Ernesto de Martino introduces one of the 20th century’s key thinkers in religious studies and demonstrates that the discipline was animated by a tension between the fear of the apocalypse and the desire for civilizational rebirth.

Tibetan Sky-gazing Meditation and the Pre-history of Great Perfection Buddhism
  • Language: en

Tibetan Sky-gazing Meditation and the Pre-history of Great Perfection Buddhism

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2024
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  • Publisher: A&C Black

"This book offers the first comprehensive introduction to the famous and secret Tibetan sky-gazing meditation known as "Skullward Leap" "--

The Art of Ectoplasm
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 478

The Art of Ectoplasm

  • Categories: Art

The legacy of the Hamiltons’ psychic archive In the wake of the First World War and the 1918–19 pandemic, the world was left grappling with a profound sense of loss. It was against this backdrop that a Winnipeg couple, physician T.G. Hamilton and nurse Lillian Hamilton, began their research, documenting and photographing séances they held in their home laboratory. Their extensive study of the survival of human consciousness after death resulted in a stunning collection of hundreds of photographs, including images of tables flying through the air, mediums in trances, and, most curious of all, ectoplasm—a strange, white substance through which ghosts could apparently manifest. The Art o...

The Notion of Solitude in Pali Buddhist Literature
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 273

The Notion of Solitude in Pali Buddhist Literature

"The book explores a diversity of sources to explore how solitary or forest-based practices are celebrated in some parts of the Pali 'imaginaire'. It provides a detailed and sustained analysis of a Buddhist understanding of solitude from one of its early textual traditions, and illuminates the paradox between two apparently 'competing' lifestyles of community and seclusion and discuss their relation and interplay"--

Tibetan Magic
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 265

Tibetan Magic

This book focuses on the theme of magic in Tibetan contexts, encompassing both pre-modern and modern text-cultures as well as contemporary practices. It offers a new understanding of the identity and role of magical specialists in both historical and contemporary contexts. Combining the theoretical approaches of anthropology, ethnography, religious and textual studies, the book aims to shed light on experiences, practices and practitioners that have been frequently marginalized by the normative mainstream monastic Buddhist traditions and Western Buddhist scholarship, which focuses primarily on meditation and philosophy. The book explores the intersection between magic/folk practices and Tantra, a complex, socio-religious phenomenon associated not only with the religious and political elites who sponsored it, but also with 'marginal' ethnic groups and social milieus, as well as with lay communities at large, who resorted to ritual agents to fulfil their worldly needs.

Encountering Buddhism in Twentieth-Century British and American Literature
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 255

Encountering Buddhism in Twentieth-Century British and American Literature

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2013-10-24
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  • Publisher: A&C Black

Encountering Buddhism in Twentieth-Century British and American Literature explores the ways in which 20th-century literature has been influenced by Buddhism, and has been, in turn, a major factor in bringing about Buddhism's increasing spread and influence in the West. Focussing on Britain and the United States, Buddhism's influence on a range of key literary texts will be examined in the context of those societies' evolving modernity. Writers discussed include T. S. Eliot, Hermann Hesse, Virginia Woolf, Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, J. D. Salinger, Iris Murdoch, Maxine Hong Kingston. This book brings together for the first time a series of context-rich interpretations that demonstrate the importance of literature in this ongoing cultural change in Britain and the United States.

Naked Seeing
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 497

Naked Seeing

Buddhism is in many ways a visual tradition, with its well-known practices of visualization, its visual arts, its epistemological writings that discuss the act of seeing, and its literature filled with images and metaphors of light. Some Buddhist traditions are also visionary, advocating practices by which meditators seek visions that arise before their eyes. Naked Seeing investigates such practices in the context of two major esoteric traditions, the Wheel of Time (Kalacakra) and the Great Perfection (Dzogchen). Both of these experimented with sensory deprivation, and developed yogas involving long periods of dwelling in dark rooms or gazing at the open sky. These produced unusual experienc...

Parapsychology and Religion
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 103

Parapsychology and Religion

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2021-06-29
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  • Publisher: BRILL

Everton Maraldi explores how research on alleged anomalous processes informs the study of religious/spiritual experiences and examines the theoretical and methodological possibilities and challenges of an interdisciplinary dialogue between parapsychology and psychology of religion.

The Culture of Giving in Myanmar
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 201

The Culture of Giving in Myanmar

How can people living in one of the poorest countries in the world be among the most charitable? In this book, Hiroko Kawanami examines the culture of giving in Myanmar, and explores the pivotal role that Buddhist monastic members occupy in creating a platform for civil society. Despite having at one time been listed as one of the poorest countries in the world in GNP terms, Myanmar has topped a global generosity list for the past four years with more than 90 percent of the population engaged in 'giving' activities. This book explores the close relationship that Buddhists share with the monastic community in Myanmar, extending observations of this relationship into an understanding of wider Buddhist cultures. It then examines how deeply the reciprocal transactions of giving and receiving in society – or interdependent living – are implicated in the Buddhist faith. The Culture of Giving in Myanmar fills a gap in research on Buddhist offerings in Myanmar, and is an important contribution to the growing field of Myanmar studies and anthropology of Buddhism.