Abhinavagupta The Kula Ritual (As Elaborated in Chapter 29 of the Tantraloka)

Abhinavagupta The Kula Ritual (As Elaborated in Chapter 29 of the Tantraloka)

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Book Specification

Item Code: IDE047
Author: John R. Dupuche
Publisher: MOTILAL BANARSIDASS PUBLISHERS PVT. LTD.
Edition: 2006
ISBN: 8120819799
Pages: 547
Cover: Hardcover
Other Details 9.0 inch X 6.0 inch

Book Description

From the Jacket:

Abhinavagupta, a leading figure in Kashmir Saivism, is increasingly being recognized as one of the chief contributors to the evolution of Indian thought. In his encyclopaedic work, the Tantraloka, 'Light on the Tantras', he describes the various tantras of his day and places at their apex the most extreme of them, the Kula ritual, which proposes the use of wine and meat and intercourse with women of the lower castes.

Is Abhinavagupta's esteem of the Kula ritual just the shadow side of genius, an aberration best forgotten? This work is a translation - the first into English of any chapter of the Tantraloka of Abhinavagupa's version of the Kuala ritual. It also provides a translation - the first into any language - of Jayaratha's indispensable commentary. It shows the structure of the text, which is not a confused mass of codes and activities but is articulated as finely as an Indian temple. The translation is accompanied by a commentary, the appendices, including glossary and index of words.

The Kula ritual leads the practitioner to ever more exalted stages of the mantra finally to reach the highest level of consciousness, the experience of mantravyapti, the 'pervasion of the mantra'. The person who knows this pervasion knows that he is Bhairava. The supreme mantra of consciousness is none other than the mantra SAUH, the supreme goddess Para, which expresses both the supreme reality and all manifested reality. In this way Abhinavagupta breaks down the dualism between sacred and profane, ritual and ordinary life so that the Kula practitioner is liberated while alive, his every act is worship and his every word is mantra.

About the Author:

John R. Dupuche is a priest of the Catholic Archdiocese of Melbourne. He is a member of the Ecumenical and Interfaith Commission of the Archdiocese and chair of its interfaith sub-committee and is involved with the Muslim Catholic Working Party. He is a member of the Australian Commission of Monastic Interfaith Dialogue and a director of the East-West Meditation Foundation. He is Chair of the Victorian Council of Churches Faith and Order Commission and an Honorary Research Associate at the Centre for Studies in Religion and Theology at Monash University. He conducts retreats and meditations in addition to his usual pastoral responsibilities.

He is particularly interested in the interface between Christianity and Kashmir Saivism.

Excerpts from Reviews:

"This work does Provide us with the best detailed picture of the Kula world and its rituals that has been produced to date as that world reveals itself in this one chapter of the Tantraloka."

- Paul E. Muller-Ortega,
Prof. Of Religion, University of Rochester.

" Dupuche's work makes no doubt a substantial contribution to the study of the so-called Kashmir Saivism, and more generally to the study of Tantrism to which Kashmir Saivism belongs. The Kula tradition, as is well-known, forms one of the major components in Abhinava's synthesis of the various currents of Saiva tantra."

- Prof. Raffaele Torella,
Chair of Sanskrit, Dipartimento di Studi Orientali,
Universita di Roma 'La Sapienza', Rome

"Abhinavagupta's Tantraloka is one of the most important work on the spirituality, philosophy and ritual of Kashmir Saivism and a mine of Information on the Tantric traditions. So far only an Italian translation by R.Gnoli of the text without the commentary by Jayaratha has been published in 1972 and a French translation by Lillian Silburn and Andre Padoux of the first five chapters with comments and extracts from Jayaratha's Viveka (1998). No complete English translation of text and commentary has come out so far. Since Abhinavagupts's verses are very terse and often contain several levels of meaning, it is necessary to consult Jayarath's commentary for a complete understanding of the text, as far as possible."
"John R. Dupuche has undertaken a difficult and major work by selecting the most esoteric chapter 29 of the Tantraloka, containing the secret Kulayaga, for a complete translation and study "

- Prof. Bettina Baumer,
Institute of Religious Studies, University of Vienna

CONTENTS
Acknowledgements vii
Preface xiii
How to Read this Monograph

xiv
PART I
Prolegomena To The Tantraloka
And To Jayaratha's Investigation

Chapters
1. Abhinavagupta

3
2. The History of the Tantric Tradition 8
a. Other Traditions 8
b. The Saiva Tantric Scriptural Traditions 10
c. The Kula Reform 15
d. Abhinava's Hierarchy of Traditions 18
e. The Exegesis of the Saiva Tantric Traditions

19
3. The Tantraloka 23
a. The Purpose of the Tantraloka 23
b. Models of Composition 24
c. Generalities on Style 26
d. The Manuscript

27
4. Jayaratha

29
5. Parameters of the Tantraloka 34
1. The Absolute:
a. As a Unitary Reality 34
b. As a Mutuality 36
c. As a Unity 38
2. The Emanation of the Absolute 41
a. As a Contraction of Splendour 41
b. As Word and Alphabet 42
c. As Cosmology 47
d. As the Human Being 52
3. Reabsorption of the Absolute 55
a. Six Pathways 56
b. Five Forms of Subtle-breath 57
c. Seven Levels of Bliss 58
d. Four Aspects of the Krama Cycle 59
e. Five States of Consciousness 60
f. Five Field of Knowledge 61
g. Twelve Stages of Sound 62
h. Four Means to Reach the Highest State 64
i. Three Attitudes

66
6. Tantraloka 29 68
a. Structure of Tantraloka 29 68
b. General Topic "The Secret Ceremony' 73
c. Sub-topic 1 'The Category 'qualified' 75
d. Sub-topic 2 'The Kula Lineage of the Perfected Beings and Their Wives' 79
e. Sub-topic 3 'The Ritual of Adoration' 113
f. Sub-topic 4 'The Ritual with the Sexual Partner' 124
g. Sub-topic 5 'The Ritual of the Secret Teaching' 147
h. Sub-topic 6 'Initiation' 150
i. Sub-topic 7 'Consecration' 164
j. Sub-topic 8 'Penetration' 166
k. Rites to Conclude the Initiation 174
PART II

The Translation Of The Tantraloka 29
And Jayaratha's Investigation

General Topic The Secret Ceremony 179
Sub-topic 1

The Category 'qualified' 179
Part I: The Rituals for the Initiated 180
Sub-topic 2 The Kula Lineage of the Perfected Beings and their Wives 180
Sub-topic 3 The Ritual of Adoration 218
Sub-topic 4 The Ritual with the Sexual Partner 240
Sub-topic 5 The Ritual of the Secret Teaching

294
Part II: The Rituals of Initiation 302
Sub-topic 6 Initiation 302
Sub-topic 7 Consecration 320
Sub-topic 8 Penetration 324
Rites to Conclude the Initiation 343

Appendices
1. The 36 Categories, the 5 Kala and the 4 Spheres 349
2. The Phonemes of Sabdarasi, Matrka and Malini and the Categories 351
3. The Uccara of OM 353
4. The Mantras 354
5. The Deities Named 355
6. The Perfected Beings etc. and their Lineages 358
7. The Installation of the Sacred Sites on the Body, According to TA 29.59-63 361
8. The Schools and Systems Named 362
9. The Text Named in TA 29 and in Jayaratha's Investigation 363
10. Index of Quotations and their Source 366
11. The Places Mentioned in TA 29 and in Jayaratha's Investigation 374
12. The Mandala of the Kula Tradition 378
13. Sanskrit Text of Tantraloka 29 379
14. Glossary of Terms and their Location within the Text 471
15. The Structure of TA 29

513
Bibliography 524


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