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The Ethnography of Anatta: Self and Selves in American Vipassana Buddhism
Author Fulton, Paul Russell
Date1986
Pages302
PublisherHarvard University
Publisher Url http://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
DegreeEd.D.
InstitutionHarvard University
DepartmentGraduate School of Education
Publication year1986
KeywordMeditation; Theravada
AbstractThe recent advent of Theravada Buddhist meditation to the West raises questions for psychological ethnography: How can the psychological symbols and beliefs which are indigenous to a remote place and time come to have meaning for individuals raised in a culturally dissimilar setting, and what happens to a system of psychology in its adjustment to its new cultural milieu? Buddhism is chosen because its concept of self, anatta, radically negates the existence of the self which is most familiar to Western folk psychology. Intensive meditation causes profound alterations in the experience of self, allowing an examination of this concept through lived experience. This examination was done through an idiographic psychological field study of 9 advanced American yogis engaged in long term intensive vipassana meditation. Data gathering consisted mainly of intensive open-ended interviews intended to elucidate self-representation and qualities of the experience of self, which were considered in multiple contexts, including the contexts of Buddhist ideology and practice in Asia and the United States, life history, life-course development in historical time, and individual personality. It was argued that if the claims of the yogis and Buddhist literature are taken seriously, the experience of anatta cannot be adequately understood through contextual analysis alone; by providing a psychology which rejects all forms of centric viewpoints, Buddhism argues that some conscious experience is "preconceptual," and therefore "precultural," though it is carried and represented in cultural forms. Buddhism in the American cultural setting is discussed, with special attention to particular cultural features which Buddhism faces in the United States.
Table of contentsIntroduction 1
Part II: Buddhism in Theory and Practice 9
Part III: Biographies 88
Part IV: The Multiple Contexts of American Buddhist Practice 177
Part V: Buddhism in the United States 247
Appendix 276
Footnotes 277
Bibliography 291
Hits492
Created date2008.06.05
Modified date2016.08.01



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