Head, Eyes, Flesh, Blood: Giving Away the Body in Indian Buddhist Literature

Head, Eyes, Flesh, Blood: Giving Away the Body in Indian Buddhist Literature

by Reiko Ohnuma
Head, Eyes, Flesh, Blood: Giving Away the Body in Indian Buddhist Literature

Head, Eyes, Flesh, Blood: Giving Away the Body in Indian Buddhist Literature

by Reiko Ohnuma

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Overview

Head, Eyes, Flesh, and Blood is the first comprehensive study of a central narrative theme in premodern South Asian Buddhist literature: the Buddha's bodily self-sacrifice during his previous lives as a bodhisattva. Conducting close readings of stories from Sanskrit, Pali, Chinese, and Tibetan literature written between the third century BCE and the late medieval period, Reiko Ohnuma argues that this theme has had a major impact on the development of Buddhist philosophy and culture.

Whether he takes the form of king, prince, ascetic, elephant, hare, serpent, or god, the bodhisattva repeatedly gives his body or parts of his flesh to others. He leaps into fires, drowns himself in the ocean, rips out his tusks, gouges out his eyes, and lets mosquitoes drink from his blood, always out of selflessness and compassion and to achieve the highest state of Buddhahood.

Ohnuma places these stories into a discrete subgenre of South Asian Buddhist literature and approaches them like case studies, analyzing their plots, characterizations, and rhetoric. She then relates the theme of the Buddha's bodily self-sacrifice to major conceptual discourses in the history of Buddhism and South Asian religions, such as the categories of the gift, the body (both ordinary and extraordinary), kingship, sacrifice, ritual offering, and death.

Head, Eyes, Flesh, and Blood reveals a very sophisticated and influential perception of the body in South Asian Buddhist literature and highlights the way in which these stories have provided an important cultural resource for Buddhists. Combined with her rich and careful translations of classic texts, Ohnuma introduces a whole new understanding of a vital concept in Buddhists studies.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780231510288
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Publication date: 12/26/2006
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 392
File size: 21 MB
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About the Author

Reiko Ohnuma is associate professor of religion at Dartmouth College. Her research focuses on premodern South Asian Buddhist literature, especially narrative literature. She lives in New Hampshire with her husband and two children.

Table of Contents

Illustrations
Tables
Conventions Used in This Book
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. The Gift-of-the-Body Genre
2. Conventions of Plot
3. Conventions of Rhetoric
4. Dāna: The Buddhist Discourse on Giving
5. A Flexible Gift
6. Bodies Ordinary and Ideal
7. Kingship, Sacrifice, Offering, and Death: Some Other Interpretive Contexts
Conclusions
Appendix: A Corpus of Gift-of-the-Body Jātakas
Notes
Bibliography of Works Cited
Index

What People are Saying About This

John Strong

Reiko Ohnuma's Head, Eyes, Flesh, and Blood has been eagerly awaited in the field and will become a 'must read' volume not only for Buddhologists but for religionists as well. Buddhist views of 'the gift' and 'the body' have never been discussed with such clarity and balance. Ohnuma is tuned into the tensions, the dilemmas, and the richness of the tradition and literary genres that she explores, and she shows how the paradoxical attitudes expressed in these tales reinforce their significance not only for our understanding of Buddhist attitudes toward the body and the gift and their connections to gender issues, ethics, and soteriology, but also toward the tradition as a whole.

John Strong, Charles A. Dana Professor of Religion, Bates College, and author of Relics of the Buddha

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