D. Max Moerman is Professor in the Department of Asian and Middle Eastern Cultures at Barnard College, Columbia University and Co-Chair of the Columbia University Seminar in Buddhist Studies.
關鍵詞
Xuanzang; Hōtan; Terajima Ryōan; Abel Rémusat; Julius Klaproth; Stanislas Julien
摘要
This chapter examines the significance of the Japanese Buddhist cartography of Xuanzang’s Great Tang Record of [Travels to] the Western Regions for the origins of the academic study of Buddhism in Europe. It traces the intellectual and material history of views of the Buddhist world produced in eighteenth-century Japan by monastics, intellectuals, and publishers as well as the transmission, translation, and reproduction of these views by the founding figures of the academic disciplines of Buddhist Studies and Sinology in nineteenth-century Paris. In doing so it seeks to reveal the unrecognized contributions of Japanese Buddhist cartography to the European understanding of the geography of Buddhism in China, Central Asia, and India and to the development of Buddhist Studies in the West.
目次
From Xuanzang to Hōtan 103 From Hōtan to Terajima 114 Hōtan in Europe 117 Julien’s Advance and Hōtan’s Return 129 Bibliography 138