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A01=James William Coleman
Author_James William Coleman
Buddhism
Category=QRF
Category=QRVK
Category=VXM
consciousness
ecofeminism
enlightenment
environmental crisis
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_mind-body-spirit
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
female Buddha
forthcoming
gender
goddess
meditation
myth
sacred feminine
spirituality
Tara
transformation
Vajrayana

Product details

  • ISBN 9798216381273
  • Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 03 Sep 2026
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Explores the meaning and power of the Buddhist goddess Tara as a fully awakened being whose feminine wisdom speaks directly to the crises of modern life. Beginning with a life-altering visionary experience during a medical crisis, sociologist ad Buddhist practitioner James William Coleman embarks on a wide-ranging inquiry into Tara’s origins, symbolism, and enduring relevance. Drawing on archaeology, comparative mythology, sociology, depth psychology, and Buddhist philosophy, the book reveals how Tara emerged from ancient goddess traditions to become one of Buddhism’s most radical figures: a Buddha who embodies compassion, wisdom, immediacy, and engagement with the suffering world.

Coleman situates Tara at the intersection of three defining movements of our time: the growing embrace of meditation and contemplative practice, the reassertion of the feminine in spiritual and cultural life, and the mounting environmental and social crises produced by ego-driven modernity. Rather than treating Tara as a distant deity, he presents her as a living expression of awakened consciousness—one that invites practitioners to embody wisdom, courage, and care in daily life.

Structured in three movements, the book first explores Tara’s historical and sociological roots, then places her within the world’s great goddess traditions, and finally examines her psychological and spiritual significance as an archetype of transformation. The concluding chapters turn decisively toward practice, offering accessible guidance for cultivating a Tara meditation that integrates insight, compassion, and ecological responsibility.

Combining personal narrative with scholarly rigor, this fresh reading of Buddhism offers readers not only a deeper understanding of Tara’s place in religious history, but a practical spiritual path for meeting the personal, social, and planetary challenges of our time.

James William Coleman has a PhD in the sociology of religion, and has published numerous books and articles including The New Buddhism and The Buddha’s Dream of Liberation. He has practiced Buddhism intensively in several traditions, and is a founding member of the White Heron Sangha in San Luis Obispo where he teaches and practices.

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