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Making a Mantra : Tantric Ritual and Renunciation on the Jain Path to Liberation

Part of the Class 200: New Studies in Religion series
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Jainism originated in India and shares some features with Buddhism and Hinduism, but it is a distinct tradition with its own key texts, art, rituals, beliefs, and history.

One important way it has often been distinguished from Buddhism and Hinduism is through the highly contested category of Tantra: Jainism, unlike the others, does not contain a tantric path to liberation.

But in Making a Mantra, historian of religions Ellen Gough refines and challenges our understanding of Tantra by looking at the development over two millennia of a Jain incantation, or mantra, that evolved from an auspicious invocation in a second-century text into a key component of mendicant initiations and meditations that continue to this day. Typically, Jainism is characterized as a celibate, ascetic path to liberation in which one destroys karma through austerities, while the tantric path to liberation is characterized as embracing the pleasures of the material world, requiring the ritual use of mantras to destroy karma.

Gough, however, argues that asceticism and Tantra should not be viewed in opposition to one another.

She does so by showing that Jains perform “tantric” rituals of initiation and meditation on mantras and ma??alas.

Jainism includes kinds of tantric practices, Gough provocatively argues, because tantric practices are a logical extension of the ascetic path to liberation.

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Product Details
University of Chicago Press
022676706X / 9780226767062
Paperback / softback
294.437
11/10/2021
United States
296 pages, 20 halftones
152 x 229 mm, 454 grams