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Beyond Words: Going off Script in Theravada Southeast Asia |
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著者 |
Edwards, Penny (著)
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掲載誌 |
Journal of Southeast Asian Studies
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巻号 | v.53 n.1-2 |
出版年月日 | 2022.06 |
ページ | 344 - 348 |
出版者 | Department of History, National University of Singapore |
出版サイト |
http://www.fas.nus.edu.sg/hist/publications/publications2_1.htm
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出版地 | Arts Link, Singapore |
資料の種類 | 期刊論文=Journal Article |
言語 | 英文=English |
ノート | Author Affiliation: University of California, Berkeley |
抄録 | Accounts of Buddhism in Thailand, Burma and Cambodia offer detailed descriptions of ‘the power attributed to inscribed amulets, tattoos, and related forms of writing’ (p. 8). But earlier scholarship on Southeast Asia ‘often looked down on non-literary uses of script’, treating it as either a ‘non-Buddhist “cultural” accretion or the ignoble trappings of popular superstition’ (p. 8). Such judgements were based on an idealised conception of Buddhism that focused on canonical scripture, and congealed under colonial rule. Where Richard Fox finds a fruitful ‘indeterminacy’ in the aksara of Bali, colonial scholarship tended towards overdetermination, creating a rigid hierarchy of Buddhist scriptural forms. Pali, the language in which generations of monks had chanted, thought and wrote, was deemed ‘less than’ Sanskrit, but ‘more than’ the plethora of indigenous languages of the region. |
目次 | Translation 345 Desire 346 |
ISSN | 00224634 (P); 14740680 (E) |
DOI | 10.1017/S0022463422000303 |
ヒット数 | 34 |
作成日 | 2023.07.14 |
更新日期 | 2023.07.14 |
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