Renunciation and Longing

Regular price €90.99
20th century
A01=Annabella Pitkin
Age Group_Uncategorized
Age Group_Uncategorized
Author_Annabella Pitkin
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buddhism
buddhists
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=HREX
Category=QRFB21
continuity
COP=United States
cultural study
culture
death
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devotion
dying
east asian religions
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grief
himalayan teacher
home-leaving
khunu lama
Language_English
lineage
loss
memory
modernism
modernity
mourning
narratives
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Price_€50 to €100
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religion
religious studies
renunciant bodhisattva
renunciation
rinpoche
separation
softlaunch
teacher-student relationships
tibet
tibetan
traditional expectations
traditions

Product details

  • ISBN 9780226796376
  • Weight: 513g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 20 May 2022
  • Publisher: The University of Chicago Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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Through the eventful life of a Himalayan Buddhist teacher, Khunu Lama, this study reimagines cultural continuity beyond the binary of traditional and modern.
 

In the early twentieth century, Khunu Lama journeyed across Tibet and India, meeting Buddhist masters while sometimes living, so his students say, on cold porridge and water. Yet this elusive wandering renunciant became a revered teacher of the Fourteenth Dalai Lama. At Khunu Lama’s death in 1977, he was mourned by Himalayan nuns, Tibetan lamas, and American meditators alike. The many surviving stories about him reveal significant dimensions of Tibetan Buddhism, shedding new light on questions of religious affect and memory that reimagines cultural continuity beyond the binary of traditional and modern.
 
In Renunciation and Longing, Annabella Pitkin explores devotion, renunciation, and the teacher-student lineage relationship as resources for understanding Tibetan Buddhist approaches to modernity. By examining narrative accounts of the life of a remarkable twentieth-century Himalayan Buddhist and focusing on his remembered identity as a renunciant bodhisattva, Pitkin illuminates Tibetan and Himalayan practices of memory, affective connection, and mourning. Refuting long-standing caricatures of Tibetan Buddhist communities as unable to be modern because of their religious commitments, Pitkin shows instead how twentieth- and twenty-first-century Tibetan and Himalayan Buddhist narrators have used themes of renunciation, devotion, and lineage as touchstones for negotiating loss and vitalizing continuity.
Annabella Pitkin is assistant professor of Buddhism and East Asian religions at Lehigh University.