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A first and coherent enquiry on vernacular religions across Monsoon
Asia and critically questioning why they have been frequently
alienated in the elitist discourse of mainstream Indic religions.
This edited volume programmatically reconsiders the creative
contribution of the littoral and insular regions of Maritime Asia
to shaping new paradigms in the Buddhist and Hindu art and
architecture of the medieval Asian world. Far from being a mere
southern conduit for the maritime circulation of Indic religions,
in the period from ca. the 7th to the 14th century those regions
transformed across mainland and island polities the rituals, icons,
and architecture that embodied these religious insights with a
dynamism that often eclipsed the established cultural centres in
Northern India, Central Asia, and mainland China. This collective
body of work brings together new research aiming to recalibrate the
importance of these innovations in art and architecture, thereby
highlighting the cultural creativity of the monsoon-influenced
Southern rim of the Asian landmass.
As a continent lying to the east of Europe, Asia has been malleable
to different spatial and temporal imaginations and politics. Recent
scholarship has highlighted how the seemingly self-contained
regional configurations of West and Central Asia, South and
Southeast Asia, and East Asia carved by the Area Studies paradigm
reflect changing (geo)political and economic interests than
historical or cultural roots. This volume advances the question as
to what Asia is, and as to whether there existed one or many
Asia(s). It seeks to explore Asian societies as interconnected
formations through trajectories/networks of circulation of people,
ideas, and objects in the longue duree. Moving beyond the divides
of area studies scholarship and the arbitrary borders set by late
colonial empires and the rise of post-colonial nation-states, this
volume maps critically the configuration of contact zones in which
mobile bodies, minds, and cultures interact to foster new images,
identities, and imaginations of Asia.
This volume seeks to foreground a borderless history and geography
of South, Southeast, and East Asian littoral zones that would be
maritime-focused, and thereby explore the ancient connections and
dynamics of interaction that favoured the encounters among the
cultures found throughout the region stretching from the Indian
Ocean littorals to the Western Pacific, from the early historical
period to the present. Transcending the artificial boundaries of
macro-regions and nation-states, and trying to bridge the arbitrary
divide between (inherently cosmopolitan) high cultures (e.g.
Sanskritic, Sinitic, or Islamicate) and local or indigenous
cultures, this multidisciplinary volume explores the metaphor of
Monsoon Asia as a vast geo-environmental area inhabited by speakers
of numerous language phyla, which for millennia has formed an
integrated system of littorals where crops, goods, ideas,
cosmologies, and ritual practices circulated on the sea-routes
governed by the seasonal monsoon winds. The collective body of work
presented in the volume describes Monsoon Asia as an ideal theatre
for circulatory dynamics of cultural transfer, interaction,
acceptance, selection, and avoidance, and argues that, despite the
rich ethnic, linguistic and sociocultural diversity, a shared
pattern of values, norms, and cultural models is discernible
throughout the region.
This volume advocates a trans-regional, and maritime, approach to
studying the genesis, development and circulation of tantric (or
Esoteric) Buddhism across Maritime Asia from the seventh to the
thirteenth centuries CE. The book lays emphasis on the mobile
networks of human agents (‘Masters’), textual sources
(‘Texts’) and images (‘Icons’) through which tantric
Buddhist traditions spread. Capitalising on recent research and
making use of both disciplinary and area-focused perspectives, this
book highlights the role played by tantric Buddhist maritime
networks in shaping intra-Asian connectivity. In doing so, it
reveals the limits of a historiography that is premised on
land-based transmission of Buddhism from a South Asian
‘homeland’ and advances an alternative historical narrative
that overturns the popular perception regarding Southeast Asia as a
‘periphery’ that passively received overseas influences. Thus,
a strong point is made for the appreciation of the region as both a
crossroads and rightful terminus of Buddhist cults, and for the
re-evaluation of the creative and transformative force of Southeast
Asian agents in the transmission of tantric Buddhism across
mediaeval Asia.
This edited volume programmatically reconsiders the creative
contribution of the littoral and insular regions of Maritime Asia
to shaping new paradigms in the Buddhist and Hindu art and
architecture of the mediaeval Asian world. Far from being a mere
southern conduit for the maritime circulation of Indic religions,
in the period from ca. the 7th to the 14th century those regions
transformed across mainland and island polities the rituals, icons,
and architecture that embodied these religious insights with a
dynamism that often eclipsed the established cultural centres in
Northern India, Central Asia, and mainland China. This collective
body of work brings together new research aiming to recalibrate the
importance of these innovations in art and architecture, thereby
highlighting the cultural creativity of the monsoon-influenced
Southern rim of the Asian landmass.
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