Hardcover, 269 pages, London 2021, new
The essays collected in The Selfless Ego propose an innovative approach to one of the most fascinating aspects of Tibetan literature: life writing. Departing from past schemes of interpretation, this book addresses issues of literary theory and identity construction, eluding the strictures imposed by the adoption of the hagiographical master narrative as synonymous with the genre.
The book is divided into two parts. Ideally conceived as an 'introduction' to traditional forms of life writing as expressed in Buddhist milieus, Part I. Memory and Imagination in Tibetan Hagiographical Writing centres on the inner tensions between literary convention and self-expression that permeate indigenous hagiographies, mystical songs, records of teachings, and autobiographies. Part II: Conjuring Tibetan Lives explores the most unconventional traits of the genre, sifting through the narrative configuration of Tibetan biographical writings as 'liberation stories' to unearth those fragments of life that compose an individual’s multifaceted existence.
This volume is the first to approach Tibetan life writing from a literary and narratological perspective, encompassing a wide range of disciplines, themes, media, and historical periods, and thus opening new and vibrant areas of research to future scholarship across the Humanities.
The chapters in this book were originally published as two special issues of Life Writing.
Introduction
Lucia Galli and Franz Xaver Erhard
Part I: Memory and Imagination in Tibetan Hagiographical Writing
1. Between Self-Expression and Convention: Tibetan Reflections on Autobiographical Writing
Ulrike Roesler
2. Nested Autobiography: Life Writing Within Larger Works
David Templeman
3. From Song to Biography and from Biography to Song: The Use of gur in Marpa’s namthar
Cécile Ducher
4. The namthar in Khalkha Dzaya Paṇḍita Lobsang Trinle (1642–1715)’s Clear Mirror
Sangseraima Ujeed
5. Reincarnation and Personal Identity in The Lives of Tibetan Masters: Linking the Revelations of Three Lamas of the Dudjom Tradition
Cathy Cantwell
6. Traces of Female Voices and Women’s Lives in Tibetan Male Sacred Biography
Hanna Havnevik
7. Forest Walking, Meditation and Sore Feet: The Southern Buddhist Biographical Tradition of Ajahn Mun and His Followers
Sarah Shaw
Part II: Conjuring Tibetan Lives
8. Memory, Politics, and Peace in the Autobiography of Sumpa Khenpo
Rachael Griffiths
9. Genealogy, Autobiography, Memoir: The Secular Life Narrative of Doring Tenzin Penjor
Franz Xaver Erhard
10. The Crafting Memory of the Self. Reflections on Tibetan Diary-Keeping
Lucia Galli
11. Family Matters: Women’s Spaces and Quiet Truths in House of the Turquoise Roof and Dalai Lama, My Son
Isabella Ofner
12. The Wandering Voice of Tibet: Life and Songs of Dubhe
Lama Jabb
13. Bearers of the Past, Bridges with the Beyond: The Complicated Lives of Ordinary Objects
Charles Ramble
Lucia Galli is Research Fellow at the Centre de recherche sur les civilisations de l’Asie orientale (CRCAO, Paris, France) and a member of the École pratique des hautes études (EPHE – PSL), where she is currently working within the framework of the ANR/DFG-funded research project Social Status in the Tibetan World (TibStat). She holds a D.Phil in Oriental Studies from the University of Oxford, UK, with a thesis on the nyindep (nyin deb, ‘diary’) of the Khampa trader Khatag Dzamyag (Kha stag ʼDzam yag).
Franz Xaver Erhard is researcher at Leipzig University, Germany. He holds a PhD in Tibetan Studies with a dissertation on contemporary Tibetan literature and has published widely on Tibetan fiction and the history of Tibetan print media. His current research project focuses on ‘Secular Life Writing in Early Modern Tibet’ with a study of Kalon Tenzin Paljor’s Autobiography Music of Candid Speech.