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Literature and the Moral Life: Reading the Early Biography of the Tibetan Queen Yeshe Tsogyal
Author Angowski, Elizabeth (撰)
Date2019
Pages352
PublisherHarvard University
Publisher Url https://www.harvard.edu/
LocationCambridge, MA, US [劍橋, 麻薩諸塞州, 美國]
Content type博碩士論文=Thesis and Dissertation
Language英文=English
Degreedoctor
InstitutionHarvard University
DepartmentCommittee on the Study of Religion
AdvisorGyatso, Janet
Publication year2019
AbstractIn two parts, this dissertation offers a study and readings of the Life Story of Yeshé Tsogyal, a fourteenth-century hagiography of an eighth-century woman regarded as the matron saint of Tibet. Focusing on Yeshé Tsogyal's figurations in historiographical and hagiographical literature, I situate my study of this work, likely the earliest full-length version of her life story, amid ongoing questions in the study of religion about how scholars might best view and analyze works of literature like biographies, especially when historicizing the religious figure at the center of an account proves difficult at best.
In my readings, I advocate a hermeneutical approach that engages the Life of Yeshé Tsogyal's self-understanding as a work that is both an authentic terma (gter ma), that is, a "treasure text" or "revealed scripture," and a namtar (rnam thar), here understood to be a narrative of an individual's pursuit of spiritual realization. Following a consideration of the work's genre, I examine two of its dominant literary features: intertextuality and dialogue. Through its use of intertextuality, I suggest that the Life seeks to cultivate a reader who is ever eager to find more—more information, but above all, further significance—in the text. The reader who reads intertextually is apt to gain both facility and comfort with the work, and even, ideally, the ability to see the work as persistently relevant to their own life. Through its use of dialogue, I find that the story works to familiarize the reader with Yeshé Tsogyal in ways that extend beyond the capacities of diegesis alone. For its dialogic qualities both among texts and between persons, I understand the Life of Yeshé Tsogyal to be a work of literature that seeks not only to account for the spiritual progress of Yeshé Tsogyal, but also to enliven her amid the religious landscapes of Tibet and Bhutan.
Table of contentsIntroduction: The Individual and the Idea of Yeshé Tsogyal in History and Literature 1

PART I: Situating the Life of Yeshé Tsogyal
Chapter One: The Literary Apotheosis of Yeshé Tsogyal 32
Chapter Two: The Life of Yeshé Tsogyal as a Treasure Text 67

PART II: Reading the Life Story of Yeshé Tsogyal
Chapter Three: A Difference that is Also a Link: Genre as a Critical Category for Reading the Life Story of Yeshé Tsogyal 142
Chapter Four: The Princess and the Tigress: Intimacy through Intertext 190
Chapter Five: Dharmic Aspirations, Poetic Conversations: Speaking About the Moral Life in the Life of Yeshé Tsogyal 228
Conclusion 302
Appendix 307
Bibliography 333
Hits404
Created date2021.12.12



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