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Articulating Potency: A study of the “Suvarna(pra)bhāsottamasūtra”
Author Gummer, Natalie Dawn (著)
Source Dissertation Abstracts International
Volumev.61 n.9 Section A
Date2000
PublisherProQuest LLC
Publisher Url https://www.proquest.com/
LocationAnn Arbor, MI, US [安娜堡, 密西根州, 美國]
Content type期刊論文=Journal Article
Language英文=English
Degreedoctor
InstitutionHarvard University
AdvisorHallisey, Charles
Publication year2000
Note321p
KeywordPotency; Suvarna(pra)bhasottamasutra; Mahayana; Sanskrit
AbstractThis study examines how the Suvarna( pra)bhāsottamasūtra (Discourse of Utmost Golden Radiance) articulates its own potency—its intrinsic value and capacity to transform beings and the cosmos. Although this potency is the predominant theme of the text, it is never definitively named or located; it is only visible in its effects. The mysterious, indeterminate source of the sūtra's potency significantly contributes to its allure: what cannot be seen or located is infinite, and the infinite inspires awe and devotion.

The dissertation explores the complex relationships among the sūtra, the Buddha, and the dharmabhānaka (the orator), as well as the synesthetic representation of the oral/aural sūtra as a potent substance (especially as a rasa, a savory liquid that is also an aesthetic quality) that enters and transforms its audience and their world. The categories of analysis employed in this close reading are derived from the Suvarna(pra) bhāsottamasūtra itself: the relationships between the form and the content of the sūtra, and between the sūtra and its auditors and orators. The words of the sūtra are about the potency of the words of the sūtra; this involuted relationship between form and content is critical to the articulation of the sūtra's potency. The sūtra also asserts the critical dependence of its value and transformative capacity upon its being uttered by an eloquent orator and heard by a receptive audience—a scenario that is intricately mirrored in the narrative content and form of the sūtra. The role of these relationships in the articulation of the sūtra's potency informs the methodology of this study.

While the Sanskrit text is the primary focus of the study, Chinese, Tibetan, and Khotanese translations of the Suvarna( pra)bhāsottamasūtra are also considered. Translation, as an interpretive process, provides a crucial glimpse of the different ways in which potency has been interpreted and re-created in varied Buddhist communities, thereby both confirming and complicating the reading of the Sanskrit text presented in this study.
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Created date2005.09.23
Modified date2024.05.28



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