The Uses of Human Malleability: Images of Hellish and Heavenly Sojourns in Pre-Modern Burma
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Visuality: Saṃvega, Pasāda, and Malleability
3. The Uses of Fear
4. Interiorities
5. The Dhamma as a Societal Ideology
6. The Reconstitution of the Conditioning Mechanism in the Late Premodern Period
7. Conclusions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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1 | Dhammapada Aṭṭhakathā as the commentary to Dhammapada, Cundasukarika Vatthu verse 15 (Burlingame 1921, vol. 28, p. 225ff). Samvegavatthudipani (Jagarabhivamsa 1986 (1348), In Burmese). On the significance of the distinction between the Pali canon and its actually used parts, see (Blackburn 1998; Collins 1998). Pagan is an excellent site to investigate this distinction. For a different treatment of this article’s subject, see (Yian 2015). |
2 | On the broader issues, most recently, see (Schoeber 2008, pp. 255–67; De La Perriere 2009, pp. 185–210). |
3 | Samvegavatthudipani (Panatipata, 20, pp. 52–54). |
4 | (Anonymous 2016, pp. 124–25, 128). |
5 | |
6 | |
7 | See (Barro and Cleary 2019). |
8 | (Olivelle 2008, pp. 405–9). |
9 | (Jayawickrama 2000, p. 99). |
10 | For broader implication of these issues, see (Hallisey and Hansen 1996, pp. 314–16). |
11 | On the larger issues involved, see (Duggan 1989). |
12 | See (Collins 1998, p. 593). |
13 | See (Mrozik 2012, pp. 261–88). |
14 | (Woodward and Hare 2008, pp. 124–25). On Kokalika, see (Malalasekera 1937–1938, vol. I, p. 673ff). |
15 | (Masefield 2000, p. 26). |
16 | See for a general discussion of the problematics of hell, the pioneering article (Braarvig 2009). |
17 | (Davids 1890) Rhys Davids, translated. 1890. I:89. |
18 | (Nanamoli 1999). Buddhaghosa, The Path of Purification, Visuddhimagga, I:53, 55, 57. |
19 | See excellent discussion (Anderson 170ff.) (Masefield 2000, p. 52). |
20 | See (Sorensen 2012). |
21 | (Bodhi 1993, p. 104). |
22 | (Woodward and Hare 2008, 3:156). |
23 | (Nanamoli and Bodhi 1995, pp. 253–68). |
24 | (Woodward and Hare 2008, I: 123ff). |
25 | (Nanamoli and Bodhi 1995, pp. 1029–38). |
26 | (Jayawickrama 2000, pp. 78–80; Nanamoli 1999, XIII: 34, 35; Nanamoli and Bodhi 1995, pp. 186, 344; Bodhi 2000, p. 294ff; Coomaraswamy 1943). (Sourced from Connected Discourses on the Aggregates. 78. The Lion. (This is Bodhi 2000). Anguttara Nikaya, the Book of Fours, The Lion—this is Bodhi 2012). See also (Nyanaponika and Hecker 1997). |
27 | (Walshe and Thera 1995, pp. 265–66; Jagarabhivamsa 1986). |
28 | See (Walker 2018, pp. 271–325). |
29 | |
30 | Mingun Sayadaw 6: 180ff. He links it also to the Udana Atthakatha and the Saratthadipani Tika. |
31 | |
32 | (Nanamoli 1999) 12:80. I thank Professor Phyllis Granoff for alerting me to this citation, private communication, June 2019. For broader issues regarding the use of emotions, see (Harre 1998; MacIntyre 2002; Solomon 1995). |
33 | |
34 | |
35 | (Bullis 1999, p. 1). |
36 | I thank professor Samerchai Pulsawan for directing me to this location. |
37 | (Shaw 2006, pp. 55–74; Nanamoli and Bodhi 1995). Majjhima Nikaya IV: Bhayabherava Sutta. pp. 102–7. |
38 | (Nanamoli 1999, III: 124, XVII: 243, XXI: 26, 29ff., 61, 69; De Silva 2018, pp. 112, 114; Woodward and Hare 2008, pp. 19, 180ff; Shaw 2006, p. 55; Nanamoli and Bodhi 1995, 102ff). |
39 | (Nanamoli 1999, XVII:243; Giustarini 2012). |
40 | (Woodward and Hare 2008, II:43ff). |
41 | For contextualization of these sentiments in South Asian milieus, see (Granoff 2012, p.180ff; Heim 2012, p. 238). |
42 | (Rhys Davids and Stede 1995, p. 628). Woodward and Hare, 5:2-5. (Granoff 2012): 185ff., Shulman: unpublished paper. |
43 | (Heim 2012, p. 246ff; Woodward and Hare 2008, I:42:ff, II:125, 126). |
44 | (Masefield 2000, p. 34). |
45 | (Cowell 1994, 5: 135, 140). Mingun Sayadaw, the Great Chronicle of the Buddha, vol. iv. |
46 | (Nanamoli 1999, I:22, 23). |
47 | (Nanamoli 1999, XXI: 96). |
48 | (Trenckner 1880, p. 205ff). |
49 | |
50 | (Cowell 1994, vol. 3, pp. 129–30). |
51 | (Nanamoli 1999, I: 161, II: 93, XIV: 142). |
52 | (Win 1992, p. 74). For other settings with somewhat similar developments, see (Crosby 2006, p. 177ff). |
53 | |
54 | (Harris 1990–1994, p. 1ff; Horner 1963–1964, p. 1:283ff; Nanamoli and Bodhi 1995, pp. 1016–28). |
55 | |
56 | (Nanamoli 1999). III: 95cc. |
57 | See (Handlin 2012). |
58 | Thirimingala Inscription, unpublished, 17 century donative notification. |
59 | The term gandhakuti was used by contemporaries during the early centuries of the second millennium. (Pe Maung Tin and Luce 1920, p. 63; Win 1992, p. 17). |
60 | The structure was found much damaged, and the archaeological department reconstruction record does not reveal where the plaques might originally have been situated. Perhaps the restorers were right to assume that they preceded the plaques narrating the bodhisatta lives, and were placed either in the lowest tiers of the stupa’s outer side, or close to the main entrance. See (Luce 1959, p. I: 262–67). |
61 | (Woodward and Hare 2008, p. II: 245ff). |
62 | |
63 | |
64 | |
65 | Unpublished lithographic inscription of the history of Shwe Mar Thae Pagoda. This dates to the reign of king Bagyidaw. |
66 | (Handlin 2012). |
67 | One of the Vimana stories illustrated in late 11th and 12th century Pagan structures, like the Alopyie Gu and the Myinkaba Kubyaukgyi, revolved around a person’s saddha that determined their behavior and its reward, explicitly inscribing the term. |
68 | |
69 | (Nanamoli 1999, p. XIX: 4; Gardiner 2012, pp. 9, 19; Eckel 2008). Such calamities lists also featured on donative inscriptions, for example in the unpublished stone inscription of the Shwe Ma Thaw Pagoda. |
70 | |
71 | (Handlin 2012). Munier Gaillard and Myint Aung p. 331. For broader implications, see (Druzin and Wan 2015). |
72 | (Handlin 2017). An early example is the 17th century Thirimingala. |
73 | In the Powin Daung context, the reference appears in the Nimi Jataka. Image badly damaged. |
74 | For other settings, see (Merback 1998, p. 21). |
75 | For comparable developments elsewhere, see (Ebrey and Gregory 1993). Thirimingala inscription, unpublished, is an early example from the 17th century. |
76 | For background, see (Charney 2006; Lieberman 2016). For analysis of the imagery and its settings from which this article departs in its interpretation, see (Green 2018). |
77 | |
78 | For comparable developments elsewhere, see (Roodenburg and Spierenburg 2004). See also for Thai context that by then would have begun to be influential in the Burmese setting (Brereton 1995). For similar components in other circulating texts, see (Hazelwood 1983, pp. 42, 194). Also (Hazelwood 1987, pp. 23, 41, 35, 222). For translation of captions under the Powin Daung cave images, see (Gaillard Munier 2007, p. 331). |
79 | See (Horner 1966). |
80 | (Nanamoli 1999, I: 22: VII: 59, XXI: 59, XXII: 111-112; Heim 2012, p. 242; Bodhi 2012, pp. 1070, 1230). See also Bhkkhu Bodhi, The Guardians of the World, www.accesstoinsight.org. |
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Handlin, L. The Uses of Human Malleability: Images of Hellish and Heavenly Sojourns in Pre-Modern Burma. Religions 2020, 11, 230. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11050230
Handlin L. The Uses of Human Malleability: Images of Hellish and Heavenly Sojourns in Pre-Modern Burma. Religions. 2020; 11(5):230. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11050230
Chicago/Turabian StyleHandlin, Lilian. 2020. "The Uses of Human Malleability: Images of Hellish and Heavenly Sojourns in Pre-Modern Burma" Religions 11, no. 5: 230. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11050230
APA StyleHandlin, L. (2020). The Uses of Human Malleability: Images of Hellish and Heavenly Sojourns in Pre-Modern Burma. Religions, 11(5), 230. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11050230