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Wallace Stevens Dharma Notes Toward A Supreme Fiction and The View From An Island Hermitage
著者 Weinschenck, George G (著)
出版年月日2007.01
ページ349
出版者ProQuest Dissertations Publishing
出版サイト https://about.proquest.com/en/dissertations/
出版地Ann Arbor, MI, US [安娜堡, 密西根州, 美國]
資料の種類博碩士論文=Thesis and Dissertation
言語英文=English
学位博士
学校State University of New York at Binghamton
学部・学科名Comparative Literature
指導教官Brett Levinson
抄録Wallace Stevens's “Notes Toward a Supreme Fiction” follows a tripartite structure (“It Must Be Abstract,” “It Must Change,” and “It Must Give Pleasure”) similar to the “Three Imponderables” of Buddhism (selflessness of phenomena, impermanence, and the truth of suffering), the three bases of the Three Turnings of the Wheel of Dharma. The poet's receipt in October, 1941, of Nyanatiloka's “Essence of the Buddha's Teaching,” a transcript of a radio lecture distributed by the monk's Island Hermitage in present-day Sri Lanka, a year before Stevens's publication of the “Notes” through Cummington Press, rules out mere coincidence, especially considering his love of all things Ceylonese.
This Buddhist reading of Stevens's long poem reveals the interdependency of his three poetic injunctions while developing a workable understanding of an implicit fourth “It Must Suffice.” The present work demonstrates that Stevens's “later reason” refers to “inferential cognition,” to be used in conjunction with the internalized reality of the imagination as a “pleasure body” toward gaining access to the “first idea.” According to this reading, the “Reality limit,” the “first idea” is revisited again and again, throughout Stevens's “Notes” in a multi-masked performance of an eternal recurrence (unending until Buddhahood is reached).
Throughout this comparison, Nyanatiloka's particular Buddhist view is distinguished among others. The German monk's teaching the “Four Noble Truths,” in the present work discussed first along with Stevens's injunction, “It Must Give Pleasure,” to follow the sequence of teachings as delivered by the Buddha for the sake of putting the simplest arguments first, is discussed in the context of the tradition of the teaching on suffering, extending to the Sutras of the Pali Canon, the oldest available source for the Buddha's teachings. Further, the teachings of selflessness or emptiness of phenomena, discussed here in conjunction with Stevens's “It Must Be Abstract” provides a seeming conflict with the above teaching of suffering that is resolved only by the complex paradoxes of the Third Turning. Stevens's repeated return to the “first idea” through the realization of ultimate truth through conventional truths as indices or metonymies additionally demonstrates the underlying unity of the “Two Truths.”
ヒット数221
作成日2023.03.29
更新日期2023.03.29



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