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Meditation in Modern Buddhism
Renunciation and Change in Thai Monastic Life

This ethnographic account of a Northern Thai monastery examines meditation in detail and analyzes the motivation and experience of renouncers.

Joanna Cook (Author)

9781107660557, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 10 April 2014

226 pages
15.2 x 23 x 1.1 cm, 0.4 kg

'This is a most welcome development in the study of Thai Buddhism - scholars have tended to focus on the religious roles, experience, activities, achievements and institutions of male Buddhists. … The book excels in achieving an impressive analytical depth that allows insights into (female) monasticism and what Cook, drawing on Foucault, calls 'meditation as a practice in self-formation'. She is able to do this thanks to the cogent engagement of data gained from other practitioners and her own experience as a meditating mae chi and deploying an impressively wide range of literature from and beyond the field of Buddhist studies.' Martin Seeger, South East Asia Research

In contemporary Thai Buddhism, the burgeoning popularity of vipassan? meditation is dramatically impacting the lives of those most closely involved with its practice: monks and mae chee (lay nuns) living in monastic communities. For them, meditation becomes a central focus of life and a way to transform the self. This ethnographic account of a thriving Northern Thai monastery examines meditation in detail, and explores the subjective signification of monastic duties and ascetic practices. Drawing on fieldwork done both as an analytical observer and as a full participant in the life of the monastery, Joanna Cook analyzes the motivation and experience of renouncers, and shows what effect meditative practices have on individuals and community organization. The particular focus on the status of mae chee - part lay, part monastic - provides a fresh insight into social relationships and gender hierarchy within the context of the monastery.

1. Meditation and monasticism: making the ascetic self in Thailand
2. Sectarianism, centralization and the propagation of meditation
3. The monastic community: duty and structure
4. Meditation as ethical imperative
5. Language and meditation
6. Monastic duty, mindfulness and cognitive space
7. Money, mae chee and reciprocity
8. Hierarchy, gender and mindfulness
9. Monasticization and the ascetic interiority of non-self
Appendix. Ordination transcript for an eight-precept nun (mae chee)
Bibliography
Index.

Subject Areas: Social & cultural anthropology, ethnography [JHMC], Buddhism [HRE], Religion & beliefs [HR]

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