The Birth of Insight: Meditation, Modern Buddhism, and the Burmese Monk Ledi Sayadaw

Author:   Erik Braun
Publisher:   The University of Chicago Press
ISBN:  

9780226418575


Pages:   280
Publication Date:   28 July 2016
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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The Birth of Insight: Meditation, Modern Buddhism, and the Burmese Monk Ledi Sayadaw


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Author:   Erik Braun
Publisher:   The University of Chicago Press
Imprint:   University of Chicago Press
Dimensions:   Width: 1.70cm , Height: 0.20cm , Length: 2.30cm
Weight:   0.397kg
ISBN:  

9780226418575


ISBN 10:   022641857
Pages:   280
Publication Date:   28 July 2016
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

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Reviews

Erik Braun's superbly researched, elegantly crafted, and eminently accessible book is the most authoritative study to date of Ledi Sayadaw and the origins of the modern Buddhist meditation revival in Burma. But its significance goes well beyond the confines of twentieth-century Burmese history. Ledi Sayadaw and his followers laid the foundation for 'Buddhist modernism, ' and by the last quarter of the twentieth century their innovative--if sometimes controversial--approach to Buddhist doctrine and practice had spread to the rest of Asia, as well as to Europe, America, and beyond. Braun's account of their achievements should be required reading for anyone interested in the roots of modern 'insight' (or 'mindfulness') meditation practice. --Robert H. Sharf, University of California, Berkeley Insight meditation (vipassana) is increasingly central to the modern practice of Buddhism, worldwide; mindfulness practices (sati) are ever more widely used in contemporary western psychotherapies. Tracing the genealogy of these developments takes us to nineteenth- and twentieth-century Burma, and Erik Braun's fascinating and lucid account of Ledi Sayadaw provides a detailed and illuminating historical context, notably in relation to colonialism, for the beginnings of the whole process. A final chapter describes Ledi's influence on other teachers in Burma, and through them on the American disciples who brought the techniques to the West. A very fine book. --Steven Collins, University of Chicago The Birth of Insight represents an important addition to current scholarship on modern Burmese Buddhism, which has broader implications for our understanding of contemporary Buddhism in South and Southeast Asia and global Buddhism generally. Engaging and challenging, it restores the study of 'texts' to the repertoire of tools at our disposal for the critical examination of Burmese tradition. --Patrick Pranke, University of Louisville Thought-provoking . . . . Braun's discussion of Ledi Sayadaw as an 'improviser, ' for whom the traditional Buddhist context mattered more than colonialism, is an important contribution to the understanding of national agency in colonial Asia. . . . [An] assiduous and judicious study of the relevant literature. --Religious Studies Review Provides a detailed and masterfully contextualized analysis of the innovative career of Ledi Sayadaw. . . . Because of Ledi's multi-faceted influence, the book will be of interest to scholars working on both Southeast Asian and Western Buddhism, as well as researchers interested in religion and its relationship with colonialism, modernity, or communication developments. --Studies in Religion Masterful. . . . This is an excellent study, one that will deservedly become a classic in the field and make possible many other studies of the history of Burmese Buddhism. --Journal of Southeast Asian Studies This is an exemplary work within the history of religions with its careful argumentation and substantial evidence for the foundation of vipassana meditation to be located within the ideas of an important nineteenth-century Burmese monk. This book will be important reading for students in the history of religions and Southeast Asian studies, and those interested in meditation and Buddhism. --H-Net An erudite and thoughtful investigation of a remarkable man and his crucial role in the development of modern Burmese Buddhism. Moreover, from a methodological viewpoint, Braun's study exhibits a formidable command of primary-source materials that are seamlessly woven into a direct narrative style in a manner that highlights the inseparability of individual historical agents, traditional religious beliefs, and modern political activity. --Religion


Erik Braun's superbly researched, elegantly crafted, and eminently accessible book is the most authoritative study to date of Ledi Sayadaw and the origins of the modern Buddhist meditation revival in Burma. But its significance goes well beyond the confines of twentieth-century Burmese history. Ledi Sayadaw and his followers laid the foundation for 'Buddhist modernism, ' and by the last quarter of the twentieth century their innovative--if sometimes controversial--approach to Buddhist doctrine and practice had spread to the rest of Asia, as well as to Europe, America, and beyond. Braun's account of their achievements should be required reading for anyone interested in the roots of modern 'insight' (or 'mindfulness') meditation practice. --Robert H. Sharf, University of California, Berkeley Insight meditation (vipassana) is increasingly central to the modern practice of Buddhism, worldwide; mindfulness practices (sati) are ever more widely used in contemporary western psychotherapies. Tracing the genealogy of these developments takes us to nineteenth- and twentieth-century Burma, and Erik Braun's fascinating and lucid account of Ledi Sayadaw provides a detailed and illuminating historical context, notably in relation to colonialism, for the beginnings of the whole process. A final chapter describes Ledi's influence on other teachers in Burma, and through them on the American disciples who brought the techniques to the West. A very fine book. --Steven Collins, University of Chicago The Birth of Insight represents an important addition to current scholarship on modern Burmese Buddhism, which has broader implications for our understanding of contemporary Buddhism in South and Southeast Asia and global Buddhism generally. Engaging and challenging, it restores the study of 'texts' to the repertoire of tools at our disposal for the critical examination of Burmese tradition. --Patrick Pranke, University of Louisville Thought-provoking . . . . Braun's discussion of Ledi Sayadaw as an 'improviser, ' for whom the traditional Buddhist context mattered more than colonialism, is an important contribution to the understanding of national agency in colonial Asia. . . . [An] assiduous and judicious study of the relevant literature. --Religious Studies Review An erudite and thoughtful investigation of a remarkable man and his crucial role in the development of modern Burmese Buddhism. Moreover, from a methodological viewpoint, Braun's study exhibits a formidable command of primary-source materials that are seamlessly woven into a direct narrative style in a manner that highlights the inseparability of individual historical agents, traditional religious beliefs, and modern political activity. --Religion Provides a detailed and masterfully contextualized analysis of the innovative career of Ledi Sayadaw. . . . Because of Ledi's multi-faceted influence, the book will be of interest to scholars working on both Southeast Asian and Western Buddhism, as well as researchers interested in religion and its relationship with colonialism, modernity, or communication developments. --Studies in Religion Masterful. . . . This is an excellent study, one that will deservedly become a classic in the field and make possible many other studies of the history of Burmese Buddhism. --Journal of Southeast Asian Studies This is an exemplary work within the history of religions with its careful argumentation and substantial evidence for the foundation of vipassana meditation to be located within the ideas of an important nineteenth-century Burmese monk. This book will be important reading for students in the history of religions and Southeast Asian studies, and those interested in meditation and Buddhism. --H-Net


Author Information

Erik Braun is assistant professor in the Religious Studies Program at the University of Oklahoma. He lives in Norman, OK.

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