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The Tantric Body: The Secret Tradition of Hindu Religion PDF

257 Pages·2005·2.27 MB·English
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T (‘woven together’ in Sanskrit) is the Hindu-based religion which originated , years ago, when the great erotic temples were built. In the West it is now best known for the inspiration of tantric yoga, and its associated ritualistic forms of sex. But is Tantra just about esoteric sexual practice or does it amount to something more? This lively and original book contributes to a more complete understanding of Tantra’s mysteries by discussing the idea of the body in Hindu tantric thought and practice in India. The author argues that within Tantra the body is a vehicle for the spirituality that is fundamental to people’s lives. The tantric body cannot be understood outside the traditions and texts that give it form. Through practice (ritual, yoga and ‘reading’) the body is formed into a pattern determined by tradition, and the practitioner thereby moulds his or her life into the shape of the tradition. While there is a great range of tantric bodies – from ascetics living in cre- mation grounds, to low-caste people possessed by tantric deities, to sophisticated high-caste Brahmans expounding the ascetic philosophy of Tantra – all share certain common assumptions and processes. Flood argues that while there is a divergence at different social levels and in different levels of tantric metaphysical claims, these levels are united by a process which the author calls ‘entextualisation of the body’. The body becomes the text through the tradition being inscribed on it. This general claim is tested against specific ritual and doctrinal examples, and the tantric traditions are linked to wider social and political forces. The Tantric Body is a fascinating study that makes an important contribution to the study of South Asian religion, and will have strong appeal to students of South Asian societies and cultures as well as to those of comparative philosophy. G F is Professor of Religion at the University of Stirling and Academic Director of the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. He is the author of An Introduction to Hinduism () and general editor of The Blackwell Companion to Hinduism (). The Tantric Body The Secret Tradition of Hindu Religion   Published in  by I.B. Tauris & Co. Ltd  Salem Rd, London    Fifth Avenue, New York   www.ibtauris.com In the United States and Canada distributed by Palgrave Macmillan, a division of St. Martin’s Press,  Fifth Avenue, New York,   Copyright © Gavin Flood  The right of Gavin Flood to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act,  Frontispiece: Cakra man (Wellcome Ms β). With kind permission of the Wellcome Trust. All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in a review, this book, or any part thereof, may not be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher.      (Hb)      (Pb)       (Hb)       (Pb) A full CIP record for this book is available from the British Library A full CIP record for this book is available from the Library of Congress Library of Congress catalog card: available Typeset in Monotype Ehrhardt by illuminati, Grosmont, www.illuminatibooks.co.uk Printed and bound in Great Britain by T.J. International Ltd, Padstow, Cornwall Contents Preface ix PART I Theory, Text and History  Introduction: The Body as Text  Tantra, Tradition and the Body  Reading Strategies: Text  Reading Strategies: Body  Experience and Asceticism  The Argument of the Book   The Vedic Body  The Political and Social Context  Legal Discourse  Political Discourse  The Highest Good   The Tantric Revelation  The Validity of Tantric Revelation  The P®ñcar®tra Revelation  The ˆaiva Revelation  Text and Tradition  The Tantric Theology of Revelation  Revelation and Doctrine   Tantric Civilisation  The Divinisation of the Body as Root Metaphor  Tantric Polity  The Tantric Temple  Tantra and Erotic Sculpture  Possession  PART II The Body as Text  The P®ñcar®tra  Emanationist Cosmology  The Purification of the Body  The Bh‚ta˜uddhi in the Tantric Revelation  The Divinisation of the Body  Inner Worship  External Worship   ˆaiva Siddh®nta  S´aiva Siddh®nta Doctrine  The Tattva Hierarchy  The Six Paths  The Ritual Process: Initiation  The Ritual Process: Daily Rites  The Ritual Process: Behaviour   Ecstatic Tantra  Absolute Subjectivity and Indexicality  The Circle of Deities in the Body  Kundalin¬ and the Cakras  .. Two Ritual Systems   The Tantric Imagination  Vision  Gesture and Utterance  Icon  Indexicality  Reading  Epilogue  Appendix: The Jay®khya-samhit®  . Abbreviations and Sources  Notes  Suggested Further Reading  Index  Preface T  represents the application of a general theoretical framework to a body of tantric texts that I have been reading, on and off, for a number of years. That theoretical framework develops the theme of the relationship between subjectivity and text. More precisely, the book offers a description and analysis of the idea that subjectivity is textually mediated within a corpus of tantric texts composed in the medieval period. To give an account of this textually mediated subjectivity is also to give an account of the tantric body. A tradition-specific understanding of self and body is constructed, as it were, through the text. The book therefore does not claim to be a work of Indology as such but draws on Indology to present a particular reading of a range of textual material. This is a reading of the body as represented within those texts, along with a tradition- specific subjectivity that the body entails, and a discussion of the implications of that reading in the context of a broader, historical understanding. The specificity of the claim is that in the Hindu tantric traditions focused primarily on the deities Vi◊nu and ˆiva in . the early medieval period, the practitioner becomes divine through the internalisation of the text, through the inscription of the body by the text, and learns to inhabit a tradition specific subjectivity. The text is mapped on to the body. The range of texts I discuss is from the Vai◊nava and ˆaiva tantric traditions, namely the P®ñcar®tra, the .

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Is tantra just about exotic sexual practice or does it amount to something more? This lively and original book contributes to a more complete understanding of tantra. It argues that within the different Hindu traditions, it is ritual and ascetic practice which fully explains corporeality. Without mi
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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.