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Spreading the Dhamma : writing, orality, and textual transmission in Buddhist Northern Thailand
Posted on 03 June 2013

  • Spreading the Dhamma : writing, orality, and textual transmission in Buddhist Northern Thailand - Daniel M. Veidlinger.
    Material Type: Book
    Language: English
    OUM Control No: 000228683
    Related Author: ebrary, Inc.
    Publication Details: Honolulu : University of Hawaiʻi Press, c2006.
    Description: xii, 259 p. : map ; 24 cm.
    Item Type: Online
    Bibliography Note: Includes bibliographical references (p. [233]-247) and index.
    ISBN No:
    • 0824830245 (hardcover : alk. paper)
    • 9780824830243
    • 9780824830243 (hardcover : alk. paper)

      Summary:

      How did early Buddhists actually encounter the seminal texts of their religion? What were the attitudes held by monks and laypeople toward the written and oral Pali traditions? In this pioneering work, Daniel Veidlinger explores these questions in the context of the northern Thai kingdom of Lan Na. Drawing on a vast array of sources, including indigenous chronicles, reports by foreign visitors, inscriptions, and palm-leaf manuscripts, he traces the role of written Buddhist texts in the predominantly oral milieu of northern Thailand from the fifteenth to the nineteenth centuries.

      Veidlinger examines how the written word was assimilated into existing Buddhist and monastic practice in the region, considering the use of manuscripts for textual study and recitation as well as the place of writing in the cultic and ritual life of the faithful. He shows how manuscripts fit into the economy, describes how they were made and stored, and highlights the understudied issue of the "cult of the book" in Theravâda Buddhism. Looking at the wider Theravâda world, Veidlinger argues that manuscripts in Burma and Sri Lanka played a more central role in the preservation and dissemination of Buddhist texts.

      By offering a detailed examination of the motivations driving those who sponsored manuscript production, this study draws attention to the vital role played by forest-dwelling monastic orders introduced from Sri Lanka in the development of Lan Na's written Pali heritage. It also considers the rivalry between those monks who wished to preserve the older oral tradition and monks, rulers, and laypeople who supported the expansion of the new medium of writing.

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