Songs on the Road Wandering Religious Poets in India, Tibet, and Japan
Materialtyp:
ArtikelSerie: Utgivningsinformation: Stockholm Stockholm University Press Stockholm University Press [Imprint] 2021Beskrivning: 1 electronic resource (154 p.)Innehållstyp: - text
- computer
- online resource
- 9789176351369
- 9789176351376
- 9789176351383
- 9789176351390
- Language qualifiers
- Indic, East Indo-European and Dravidian languages
- Early Indic languages
- Sanskrit
- The Arts
- The Arts: treatments and subjects
- History of art
- Philosophy and Religion
- Religion and beliefs
- Religion: general
- History of religion
- Hinduism
- Buddhism
- 2 Language qualifiers
- 2B Indic
- 2BB Early Indic languages
- 2BBA Sanskrit
- A The Arts
- AG The Arts
- AGA History of art
- Buddhism
- East Indo-European and Dravidian languages
- Hinduism
- Journey
- Poetry
- Q Philosophy and Religion
- QR Religion and beliefs
- QRA Religion
- QRAX History of religion
- QRD Hinduism
- QRF Buddhism
- Religion
- general
- thema EDItEUR
- treatments and subjects
Open Access Unrestricted online access star
This book consists of seven chapters on the subject of poetry and itinerancy within the religious traditions of India, Tibet, and Japan from ancient to modern times. The chapters look, each from a different angle, at how itinerancy is reflected in religious poetry, what are the purposes of the wanderers' poems or songs, and how the wandering poets relate to local communities, sacred geography, and institutionalized religion. We encounter priest-poets in search of munificent patrons, renouncers and yogins who sing about the bliss and hardship of wandering alone in the wilderness, Hindu pilgrims and opponents of pilgrimage, antinomian Buddhist-Tantric poets from Bengal, and the originator of the haiku. We are led along roads travelled by many, as well as paths tread by few.
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eng
Freely available e-book