Living with the Vinaya by Ryosuke Kuramoto, Hardcover, 9780824897550 | Buy online at The Nile
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Living with the Vinaya

An Ethnography of Monasticism in Myanmar

Author: Ryosuke Kuramoto and Mark Michael Rowe   Series: Contemporary Buddhism

The rules monks live by, the Vinaya, are a pivotal source of meaning for them and their dealings with society and form the basis of multiple monasticisms across regions and history. In this book, Kuramoto examines the process of creating monasticism in contemporary Myanmar by focusing on how monks acquire, possess, and consume material goods.

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Summary

The rules monks live by, the Vinaya, are a pivotal source of meaning for them and their dealings with society and form the basis of multiple monasticisms across regions and history. In this book, Kuramoto examines the process of creating monasticism in contemporary Myanmar by focusing on how monks acquire, possess, and consume material goods.

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Description

Around the first century BCE, Buddhist monks formed monasteries and established relationships with kings and lay people. The rules monks live by, the Vinaya, are a pivotal source of meaning for them and their dealings with society and form the basis of multiple monasticisms across geographical regions and throughout history. The ways in which the Vinaya is understood and practiced, therefore, must take into account the kind of monasticism that emerges from it. In Living with the Vinaya, Ryosuke Kuramoto examines the process of creating monasticism in contemporary Myanmar by focusing on how monks acquire, possess, and consume material goods.

To live as a monk means to obtain resources from society and to own and use these according to monastic rules. Over the centuries, as monks interacted more with the world beyond the monastery, the question of what a monk ""should be"" became a concern for not only monks, but also government authorities and lay people. How monks interpreted and observed the Vinaya became a question of legitimacy and power. Kuramoto’s ethnographic analysis reveals the constant (re)creation of monasticism in Myanmar resulting from the interactions between monks and these groups in response to this question. He identifies some of the key mechanisms by which monasticism and broader Buddhist institutions are created and transformed and concludes that monastic governance is inseparable from the Buddhist state and the society that surrounds it.

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Critic Reviews

Living with the Vinaya is an exceptionally strong book that will set a standard for ethnography of Theravada monasticism. It is an insightful exploration of issues of monastic governance and how the support of monks shapes Burmese society as a whole.--Alicia Turner, York University

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About the Author

Ryosuke Kuramoto is associate professor of cultural anthropology at the Institute for Advanced Studies on Asia, University of Tokyo.

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Product Details

Publisher
University of Hawai'i Press
Published
30th November 2024
Pages
277
ISBN
9780824897550

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