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The Invention of Chinese Buddhist Poetry: Poet-Monks in Late Medieval China (c. 760-960)
- Author(s):
- Tom Mazanec (see profile)
- Date:
- 2016
- Group(s):
- LLC East Asian, TC Religion and Literature
- Subject(s):
- Buddhism, China, Chinese literature, Comparative literature, Digital humanities
- Item Type:
- Dissertation
- Institution:
- Princeton University
- Tag(s):
- Chinese poetry, literary history, network analysis, Religious literature, Tang dynasty, Chinese Buddhism, Religious studies
- Permanent URL:
- http://dx.doi.org/10.17613/M6HQ2S
- Abstract:
- This dissertation presents an alternative history of late medieval literature, one which traces the development of Chinese Buddhist poetry into a fully autonomous tradition. It does so through a careful study of the works of poet-monks in the late medieval period (760–960). These poet-monks established a tradition of elite Buddhist poetry in classical Chinese that continued in East Asia until the twentieth century. This dissertation also breaks new methodological ground by using digital methods on medieval sources, and by using poetry composition manuals to understand medieval Chinese poetry on its own terms. The introduction analyzes the meanings of “religious literature” and situates this study of poet-monks therein. Part I, comprised of chapters 2, 3, and 4, presents a social history of poet-monks first by examining the invention of the term “poet-monk” in the late eighth century and its development until the tenth, then by mapping literary relations in the late medieval period using social network analysis. It demonstrates the existence and importance of poet-monks to the literary culture of this time. Part II, comprised of chapters 5 and 6, turns to the monks’ poetics at their most extreme: first the wild excess of repetition in song, madness, and incantation; then the austere devotion of “bitter intoning” and the identification of poetry with meditation. Both extremes are the fruit of the poet-monks’ mixing of literary and religious practices. The conclusion shows how the poet-monks identified their religious and literary practices, hints at why their work had been neglected, and reflects on the implications of this dissertation for the study of religious poetry. Thus, this dissertation provides one way of answering the question of how to define religious poetry and sheds light on an overlooked corner of Chinese literary history, reconstructing an entire subtradition to demonstrate their fusion of religious and literary practices.
- Metadata:
- xml
- Status:
- Published
- Last Updated:
- 6 years ago
- License:
- All Rights Reserved
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The Invention of Chinese Buddhist Poetry: Poet-Monks in Late Medieval China (c. 760-960)