|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Descent of the Deities: The Water-Land Retreat and the Transformation of the Visual Culture of Song-Dynasty (960-1279) Buddhism |
|
|
|
Author |
Bloom, Phillip Emmanual (撰)
|
Date | 2013 |
Pages | 670 |
Publisher | Harvard University |
Publisher Url |
https://www.harvard.edu/
|
Location | Cambridge, 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 |
Degree | doctor |
Institution | Harvard University |
Department | History of Art and Architecture |
Advisor | Wang, Eugene Yuejin |
Publication year | 2013 |
Abstract | This dissertation identifies a paradox at the heart of the visual culture of Song-dynasty (960-1279) Buddhism. On the one hand, as the celestial pantheon expanded, it was conceptualized in ever more bureaucratic ways, mirroring the growth of the terrestrial government itself. On the other hand, the boundary separating that supramundane realm from the human world became decidedly more permeable; ghosts and deities became an omnipresent part of daily life. How to treat these two contradictory phenomena--one pointing to rational orderliness, the other pointing to unpredictable unruliness--posed a distinct problem for Song visual artists, spurring the development of new strategies of pictorial representation and forcing reflection upon the nature of representation itself. Chinese Buddhist art was never to be the same again. I argue that the key to understanding these new forms of art lies in the Water-Land Retreat (Shuilu zhai), a massive, icon-filled ritual of decidedly cosmic pretensions. The patterns of practice and strategies of visual representation associated with this ritual constitute a system that radically broke with earlier Chinese tradition. Practitioners of the liturgy created an open ritual syntax that allowed it to take on myriad forms in accordance with its sponsors’ needs, while also allowing it to absorb deities and practices from non-Buddhist traditions. This dissertation examines these phenomena in three parts. Part 1 excavates the social place, methods of practice, and visual profile of the Water-Land Retreat in and around the Song. Relying extensively on paintings from the Jiangnan region, cliff carvings from Sichuan, and numerous liturgical manuscripts, I argue that image and practice are inextricably bound in this ritual. Part 2 focuses on the motif of the cloud in Water-Land-related images and texts. Through an examination of images of cloud-borne descending deities, I contend that this nebulous motif became the locus for reflection on the mediational nature of representation. Finally, Part 3 addresses the bureaucratization of ritual practice and pictorial production in Song Buddhism. I argue that practitioners of the Water-Land Retreat simultaneously embraced and transcended a bureaucratic idiom drawn from Daoism and contemporary government to create a new Buddhist vision of the cosmos. |
Table of contents | Acknowledgments vi List of Figures xi INTRODUCTION 1 PART 1 | Faint Traces: Envisioning Early Practices of the Water-Land Retreat 13 CHAPTER 1.1 | Endings: Late-Imperial Liturgies for the Water-Land Retreat 40 CHAPTER 1.2 | Beginnings: Histories and Mytho-Histories of the Water-Land Retreat 86 CHAPTER 1.3 | Universal Efficacy: The Practice, Function, and Vision of the WaterLand Retreat in the Song 128 PART 2 | Nebulous Intersections: The Water-Land Retreat and the Rise of the Liturgical Cloud 241 CHAPTER 2.1 | A Systematized Endpoint: The Clouds of Qinglong si and the Tiandi mingyang shuilu zhai 244 CHAPTER 2.2 | Stepping Backward: A History of the Liturgical Cloud 272 CHAPTER 2.3 | Clouds and Conceptions of Representation in the Song 332
PART 3 | Ordering the Cosmos: The Performance and Aesthetics of Bureaucracy in the WaterLand Retreat 370
APPENDIX 1: Pantheons 453 LIST OF BIBLIOGRAPHIC ABBREVIATIONS 458 BIBLIOGRAPHY 461 FIGURES 485 |
Hits | 489 |
Created date | 2021.12.12 |
|
Best viewed with Chrome, Firefox, Safari(Mac) but not supported IE
|
|
|