Milton Public Library

A Buddhist sensibility, aesthetic education at Tibet's Mindröling Monastery, Dominique Townsend

Label
A Buddhist sensibility, aesthetic education at Tibet's Mindröling Monastery, Dominique Townsend
Language
eng
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
A Buddhist sensibility
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Responsibility statement
Dominique Townsend
Series statement
Studies of the Weatherhead East Asian Institute, Columbia University
Sub title
aesthetic education at Tibet's Mindröling Monastery
Summary
Founded in 1676 during a cosmopolitan early modern period, Mindröling monastery became a key site for Buddhist education and a Tibetan civilizational center. Its founders sought to systematize and institutionalize a worldview rooted in Buddhist philosophy, engaging with contemporaries from across Tibetan Buddhist schools while crystallizing what it meant to be part of their own Nyingma school. At the monastery, ritual performance, meditation, renunciation, and training in the skills of a bureaucrat or member of the literati went hand in hand. Studying at Mindröling entailed training the senses and cultivating the objects of the senses through poetry, ritual music, monastic dance, visual arts, and incense production, as well as medicine and astrology. Dominique Townsend investigates the ritual, artistic, and cultural practices inculcated at Mindröling to demonstrate how early modern Tibetans integrated Buddhist and worldly activities through training in aesthetics. Considering laypeople as well as monastics and women as well as men, A Buddhist Sensibility sheds new light on the forms of knowledge valued in early modern Tibetan societies, especially among the ruling classes. Townsend traces how tastes, values, and sensibilities were cultivated and spread, showing what it meant for a person, lay or monastic, to be deemed well educated. Combining historical and literary analysis with fieldwork in Tibetan Buddhist communities, this book reveals how monastic institutions work as centers of cultural production beyond the boundaries of what is conventionally deemed Buddhist
Target audience
adult
Classification
Contributor
Content