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Dublin Core |
PKP Metadata Items |
Metadata for this Document |
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1. |
Title |
Title of document |
4. Exorcizing the Body Politic: The Lion’s Roar, Köten Ejen’s Two Bodies and the Question of Conversion at the Tibet-Mongol Interface - Buddhist Violence and Religious Authority |
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2. |
Creator |
Author's name, affiliation, country |
Matthew King; University of California, Riverside; |
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3. |
Subject |
Discipline(s) |
Buddhist Studies |
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4. |
Subject |
Keyword(s) |
Michael Jerryson; Buddhism and violence; religion and violence; religious nationalism; Buddhist history; Burma; religious authority |
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5. |
Subject |
Subject classification |
Buddhism and Violence |
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6. |
Description |
Abstract |
Goden Ejen (Tib. Lha sras go tan rgyal po, 1206–1251) was Chinggis Khan’s grandson and a military leader involved with Mongol campaigns against the Song Dynasty. The second son of Ögedei Khaan and a brother of Güyük Khan, Goden Ejen ruled over large swaths of China prior to the rise of Khubilai Khan and the establishment of the Yuan Dynasty in 1271. According to later Tibetan and Mongolian memorialization, it was Goden who directed the Tangut military general Doorta to lead Mongol troops into eastern Tibet in 1240. In time, Goden summoned the Central Tibetan Buddhist polymath Sakya Paṇḍita, by then already an old man, to his court at Liangzhou. The elderly Tibetan master is said to have converted Goden to Buddhism, which then opened the great dispensation of the Dharma into Mongol lands that deepened over the course of the Yuan, the Northern Yuan, the Ming, and the Qing periods. In honor of Michael Jerryson’s field-building work to center violence in Buddhist thought and society as a way to trouble modernist and Eurocentric presumptions in the study of Asian religions, this chapter examines 13-20th century monastic memorialization of the bodily violence enacted upon Goden Ejen at the center of this “Buddhist conversion of the Mongols.” This chapter examines the therapeutic practices and metaphors used in these sources to describe the bodily afflictions that besot Goden and counter-violence enacted by Sakya Paṇḍita as a critique of the usage of Christo-centric “conversion” in the study of pre-modern Inner Asian Buddhist history. |
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7. |
Publisher |
Organizing agency, location |
Equinox Publishing Ltd |
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8. |
Contributor |
Sponsor(s) |
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9. |
Date |
(YYYY-MM-DD) |
05-Oct-2022 |
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10. |
Type |
Status & genre |
Peer-reviewed Article |
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11. |
Type |
Type |
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12. |
Format |
File format |
PDF |
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13. |
Identifier |
Uniform Resource Identifier |
https://journals.equinoxpub.com/index.php/books/article/view/40725 |
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14. |
Identifier |
Digital Object Identifier |
10.1558/equinox.40725 |
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15. |
Source |
Journal/conference title; vol., no. (year) |
Equinox eBooks Publishing; Buddhist Violence and Religious Authority |
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16. |
Language |
English=en |
en |
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18. |
Coverage |
Geo-spatial location, chronological period, research sample (gender, age, etc.) |
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19. |
Rights |
Copyright and permissions |
Copyright 2014 Equinox Publishing Ltd |