Catastrophe and Prophecy in Tibetan Religious Contexts
Sommaire / ContentsJetsun DELEPLANQUE & Brandon DOTSONÀ nos lectrices et à nos lecteurs / To Our ReadersINTRODUCTION GÉNÉRALE / GENERAL INTRODUCTIONBrandon DOTSON Catastrophe and Prophecy in Tibetan Religious ContextsDOSSIERBrandon DOTSON Buddhism and Apocalypticism in Conversation: An Early Tibetan Text on the “Cult of the Tempest”Rory LINDSAYInspired by a God’s Death: Buddhist Narratives of Divine Mortality and Their Ritual ImplicationsJetsun DELEPLANQUEMillenarianism, Utopia, and the Founding of the Bhutanese StateNatasha MIKLESBetween Two Apocalypses: Catastrophic Millenialism and Narrative Modeling in the Gesar EpicMatthew KINGThe Ghost in Mañjusri’s Mandala: Excavating Trülku Drakpa Gyeltsen’s Prophecies in the Ruins of the QingNaljor TseringRgya nag skag bzlog: The “Chinese Way of Repelling Disaster” or “Repelling Chinese Disasters”VARIASHAO Jiade & QIN Sen Social Networks and the Impact of Buddhist Canon Printing in Modern China: Focusing on Tianning Monastery in ChangzhouSHEN Ting The Zhina Neixue Yuan (China Institute of Inner Learning) and the Formation of the Modern Chinese Buddhist Knowledge: A Miao Fenglin Case StudyCOMPTES RENDUS / BOOK REVIEWSDarcie M. PRICE-WALLACEChandra Chiara EHM, Queens Without a Kingdom Worth Ruling. Buddhist Nuns and the Process of Change in Tibetan Monastic Communities Antonio TERRONEWei WU, Esoteric Buddhism in China. Engaging Japanese and Tibetan Traditions, 1912–1949LONG Junxi LEI Wen , Jiaomiao zhiwai. Sui Tang guojia jisi yu zongjiao Fabienne JAGOUISHIHAMA Yumiko & Alex MCKAY, éd., The Early 20th Century Resurgence of the Tibetan Buddhist World. Studies in Central Asian BuddhismAuteurs du présent volume / Contributors to This Volume