Dear list members,
Our next seminar will be at 6:00-7:30pm on Wednesday May 6 in Room
S325 of the John Woolley Building, University of Sydney.
We hope you can attend.
Kind regards,
AABS Executive
What is 'Essential Buddhism'? The Winnowed Canon in
South Asia
The question of how a person should think and act to promote their
self-awakening lies at the heart of Buddhism. The literature on a
Buddhist's 'duty', their dharma, is, however, dauntingly large and
varied. There is no single set of texts authoritative for all followers
of Buddhism, although attempts are constantly made to conceive or promote
a sanctioned corpus, a 'canon'. All essentializations of Buddhism were
famously rejected by Nāgārjuna; but his own tradition, codified in the
Sanskrit language, barely survives today. Why has so little of the
Sanskritic corpus, once dominant in South Asia, been transmitted? This
seminar focuses on an overlooked moment in the final days of Buddhism in
India, when the last monasteries dispatched their libraries across the
Himalayas. It explores, using hitherto unstudied material, an almost
unthinkable scenario: that most of the 'canon' was deliberately thrown
out. All works on the vinaya, which perpetuated the collapsing
institution of celibate monasticism, were eliminated in this period. In
their place, a mini-canon of scripture suitable for tantric Buddhist
householders was propagated, which has defined the surviving Sanskritic
tradition up to the present.
Iain Sinclair (M. A.)
specialises in the history, literature and art of South Asian Buddhism.
He has studied the Sanskritic and Himalayan traditions of Buddhism for
several years in Nepal, Hamburg and at Monash University. Recently he
edited a peer-reviewed collection of articles in honour of Michael Allen,
the distinguished Sydney-based anthropologist.
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