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How to See the Invisible: Attention, Landscape, and the Transformation of Vision in Tibetan Pilgrimage Guides
Author Hartmann, Catherine (著)
Source History of Religions
Volumev.62 n.4
Date2023
Pages313 - 339
PublisherUniversity of Chicago Press
Publisher Url https://www.press.uchicago.edu/index.html
LocationChicago, IL, US [芝加哥, 伊利諾伊州, 美國]
Content type期刊論文=Journal Article
Language英文=English
NoteAuthor Affiliation: University of Wyoming, USA.
AbstractThis article asks how religious traditions make otherwise invisible worlds perceptible and real for religious practitioners and analyzes the specific case of Tibetan pilgrimage literature in order to propose a theoretical account for how they do so. Specifically, I show how the textual tradition of Tibetan pilgrimage guides plays a key role in structuring the pilgrimage experience, particularly in terms of the pilgrim’s visual encounter with the material landscape. Pilgrimage guides are particularly concerned with vision because the Tibetan pilgrimage tradition maintains that holy mountains have both an outer appearance visible to ordinary people and an inner reality that only advanced beings can see. As such, the goal for pilgrims is to transform their perception so as to see the hidden reality of the mountain. To show how guides seek to facilitate such a transformation, I first identify the key literary strategies that guides use to project a fantastic vision of the holy sites they describe. Next, I demonstrate how guides recontextualize pilgrims’ ordinary perception of the pilgrimage site such that they view the ordinary in tandem with the extraordinary. I refer to this facility as “co-seeing,” or the ability to see the place in two ways at once. This co-seeing serves to ground the fantastic vision of the site in the material landscape. The article thus draws on new theoretical developments in the so-called visual turn and new materialism to provide an account of how religious traditions engage both perception and landscape to shape practitioners’ experience of the world.
Table of contentsTIBETAN BUDDHIST PILGRIMAGE AND THE GENRE OF PILGRIMAGE GUIDES 317
THEORETICAL APPROACH:METAPHOR,ATTENTION,AND CO-SEEING 323
HOW PILGRIMAGE GUIDES DRAW THE EYE 325
DENATURALIZING ORDINARY PERCEPTION 326
RECONTEXTUALIZATION 328
INVITING PILGRIMS’ PARTICIPATION 333
FIGURATION: MOUNTAIN AS MANDALA 334
CONCLUSION 336
ISSN00182710 (P); 15456935 (E)
DOI10.1086/724562
Hits76
Created date2024.03.27
Modified date2024.03.28



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