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Imagining Karma: Ethical Transformation in Amerindian, Buddhist and Greek Rebirth (Comparative Studies in Religion & Society) Paperback – 19 Nov 2002


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Review

"This work is a tour-de-force in cross-cultural scholarship, both sound and bold, constructing a new and refreshing theory on the rise to prominence of rebirth eschatology in India. Obeyesekere argues convincingly that "ethicization" of rebirth through the theory of karma was the new ingredient that transformed a commonplace belief into a central philosophical and eschatological principle in most of Indian theologies. This is a book that will engage and challenge anthropologists, classicists, and Indologists alike, as well as non-specialists interested in culture and religion." - Patrick Olivelle, University of Texas at Austin "This is a book in the grand tradition of comparative studies, pulling together anthropology, psychology, psychoanalysis, classics, Indology, and history of religions, but in a distinctly contemporary mode. Few scholars would attempt such a project today, let alone pull it off so intriguingly as Obeyesekere does. A brilliant and intellectually courageous book." - Paul B. Courtright, Emory University, author of Ganesha, Lord of Obstacles, Lord of Beginnings

About the Author

Gananath Obeyesekere is Professor of Anthropology, Emeritus, at Princeton University. He is the author of The Apotheosis of Captain Cook: European Mythmaking in the Pacific (1997), The Cult of the Goddess Pattini (1984), Medusa's Hair: An Essay on Personal Symbols and Religious Experience (1984), and The Work of Culture: Symbolic Transformation in Psychoanalysis and Anthropology (1990).


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The major problem that I investigate in this work is the manner in which the "rebirth eschatologies" of small-scale societies are transformed in two large-scale historical developments: in the "karmic eschatologies" that one associates today with religions such as Buddhism and Hinduism and in the Greek religious traditions that could be broadly defined as "Pythagorean." Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Amazon.com: HASH(0x95c2f654) out of 5 stars 2 reviews
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
HASH(0x95c35d38) out of 5 stars Rebirth and karma in the evolution of religion 5 Feb. 2010
By Peter Oliphant - Published on Amazon.com
Format: Paperback
Imagining karma studies how rebirth eschatology evolves into karma eschatology. Eschatology is ideas about life after death. Rebirth is the theory that the dead return to the living. Karma is the theory that the return of the dead depends on moral conduct. This study reviews ethnography of aboriginal Australians, Amerindians of the Northwest Coast, Trobriand Islanders, and West Africans; ancient Greece and Rome; and Hinduism and Buddhism in India and Bali. Obeyesekere looks for how theories of rebirth confront theories of karma in these societies. He creates four concepts to study variations on this confrontation. Theories of rebirth are grounded in "species sentience" (first concept), which is the primordial assumption that "animate existence constitutes a single order held together by common sentience, both physical and spiritual." (45). The universal fact of human wrongdoing everywhere confronts species sentience, resulting in the "ethicization" (second concept) of rebirth. Ethicization means that "putting soul-possessing human beings at the center of creation erodes the idea of animal rebirth and subverts any prior doctrine of species sentience." (318) Ethics, introduced into rebirth eschatology, must transform it into karmic eschatology. The complication of species sentience by ethicization makes for continuous debates in native societies. These debates change the religion by "conceptualism" (third concept), which means that "once a new concept has been developed, it must loop back into earlier concepts and infuse them with further meaning and significance." (129) Debaters practice "axiologization" (fourth concept): "deliberate and self-conscious transfiguring of local, preexisting, or contending values...gives [these values] deeper ethical and symbolic significance, often universal, even cosmic in scope." (174). His scholarly writing treats the ethnographic data in minute detail and is comprehensive about the literature. Written for anthropologists, the style is often precious. For examples, chapter 7 is entitled, "Imprisoning frames and open debates." People who are not used to exquisite references to extinct and scholarly writings in academic seminars will be impatient, but the portrayal of the evolution of primitive, archaic, and historic religions is very satisfying.
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful
HASH(0x95d8e5b8) out of 5 stars Convincing Argument for the Origination of Rebirth In India 14 Mar. 2009
By Frederick E. Watt IV - Published on Amazon.com
Format: Paperback
This is a great book by a great scholar who has pulled together various strands of different studies from historical texts to modern anthropology to try to come to understand where the notion of rebirth came from and what transformations are needed to create it into the classic karma/rebirth eschatology that is central to Indian religious thought.

It is a scholarly book and is recommended for those interested in Buddhism and the origins of kamma and rebirth.
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