| Record ID | ia:tibetanrenaissan0000davi |
| Source | Internet Archive |
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100 1 $aDavidson, Ronald M.,$d1950-
245 10 $aTibetan renaissance :$bTantric Buddhism in the rebirth of Tibetan culture /$cRonald M. Davidson.
246 3 $aTantric Buddhism in the rebirth of Tibetan culture
260 $aNew York :$bColumbia University Press,$c©2005.
300 $a1 online resource (xiv, 596 pages) :$billustrations, maps
336 $atext$btxt$2rdacontent
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504 $aIncludes bibliographical references (pages 521-574) and index.
505 0 $aPreface; List of Maps, Figures, and Tables; Pronunciation Guide; Introduction; Pakpa and the Mongol Endgame; Historical Agents in the Renaissance; The Sakya Paradigm and the Present Work; Renaissance as a Trope; 1 Early Medieval India and the Esoteric Rhapsody; Sociopolitical India in the Medieval Period; The Buddhist Experience and Institutional Esoteric Buddhism; The Perfected: Siddhas and the Margins of Society; Tantric Literature and Ritual; Naropa the Legend: The Great Pandita Goes Native; Virupa's Hagiography: Mr. Ugly Comes to Town; Hagiography, Lineage, and Transmission.
505 8 $aConclusion: Emerging Indian Rituals2 The Demise of Dynasty and a Poorly Lit Path; Good Intentions at the End of the Empire; Fragmentation: Flight in the Dark, Light in the Tombs; Religion on an Uneven Path; Clans in the Tenth and Eleventh Centuries; Conclusion: A Change of Fortune in Tibet; 3 Renaissance and Reformation: The Eastern Vinaya Monks; In Pursuit of Virtue in the Northeast; To Central Tibet on a Mission from Buddha; Conflict on the Roof of the World; West Tibet and the Kadampa Connection; History as the Victory of Great Ideas and Good Organization.
505 8 $aConclusion: A Tradition Under the Imperial Shadow4 Translators as the New Aristocracy; Mantrins and Motivation for New Translations; Trans-Himalayan Coronation; The Curious Career of Ralo Dorjé-drak; Tantric Action in Practice; The Mysterious Master Marpa; Gray Texts, New Translation Apocrypha, and Zhama Chökyi Gyelpo; The Invention of Neoconservative Orthodoxy; The Cult and Culture of Knowledge; Conclusion: The Translator as Prometheus; 5 Drokmi: The Doyen of Central Tibetan Translators; The Nomadic Translator; Drokmi in India; An Eventual Return to Tibet.
505 8 $aThe Indian Contingent: Gayadhara and the Other PanditasDrokmi's Work and the Origin of the Root Text of the *Margaphala; The Contents of the Root Text of the *Margaphala; The Eight Subsidiary Cycles of Practice; Drokmi's Other Translations; Conclusion: Fallible Characters with Literary Genius; 6 Treasure Texts, the Imperial Legacy, and the Great Perfection; Buried Treasures Amid the Rubble of Empire; Guarded by Spirits: The Hidden Imperial Person; Terma in the Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries; Give Me That Old-Time Religion; The Alternative Cult of Knowledge: Rig-pa.
505 8 $aConclusion: The Absent Imperium as an Eternal Treasure7 The Late Eleventh Century: From Esoteric Lineages to Clan Temples; The Little Black Acarya: Padampa and His Zhiché; Popular Expressions and a Zeal to Spread the Message; The Late-Eleventh-Century Intellectual Efflorescence; Drokmi's Legacy and the Next Generation; The Khön Clan Mythology and Sakya Beginnings as a Clan Temple; Conclusion: New Beginnings in the Wake of the Translators; 8 The Early Twelfth Century: A Confident Tibetan Buddhism; The Kadampa Intellectual Community; The Kalacakra Comes of Age.
520 $aHow did a society on the edge of collapse and dominated by wandering bands of armed men give way to a vibrant Buddhist culture, led by yogins and scholars? Ronald M. Davidson explores how the translation and spread of esoteric Buddhist texts dramatically shaped Tibetan society and led to its rise as the center of Buddhist culture throughout Asia, replacing India as the perceived source of religious ideology and tradition. During the Tibetan Renaissance (950-1200 C.E.), monks and yogins translated an enormous number of Indian Buddhist texts. They employed the evolving literature and pr.
650 0 $aBuddhism$zChina$zTibet Autonomous Region.
650 0 $aTantric Buddhism$zChina$zTibet Autonomous Region.
650 7 $aRELIGION$xBuddhism$xGeneral.$2bisacsh
650 7 $aRELIGION$xBuddhism$xTibetan.$2bisacsh
650 7 $aBuddhism.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst00840028
650 7 $aTantric Buddhism.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01142876
651 7 $aChina$zTibet Autonomous Region.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01758817
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650 7 $aTantrismus$2gnd
651 7 $aTibet$2gnd
650 07 $aTibetischer Buddhismus.$2swd
650 07 $aTantrismus.$2swd
651 7 $aTibet.$2swd
655 0 $aElectronic books.
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776 08 $iPrint version:$aDavidson, Ronald M.$tTibetan Renaissance : Tantric Buddhism in the Rebirth of Tibetan Culture.$dNew York : Columbia University Press, ©2010$z9780231134712
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