Temple Architecture and Modern Hindu Appropriations of Buddhism

Douglas Ober, P. Maitland
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Abstract

Abstract:During the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, Buddhism became deeply embedded in an array of social and political debates taking place across India. The unique history of Buddhism in India and of its spread across Asia offered a model of ideological and cultural emancipation that was used not only to challenge colonial rule but also to further numerous anti-caste movements against existing Brahmanical institutions and practices. While the history of anti-caste and Dalit engagements with Buddhism has largely been studied through a discussion of the Indian constitutionalist B. R. Ambedkar's conversion to Buddhism along with some half million of his followers in 1956, this article addresses the ways in which Buddhism came to be simultaneously seen as a "Hindu sect" and central to Hindu nationalist projects. It does so through a detailed analysis of the planning and construction of several "Hindu-Buddhist" temples constructed in the 1930s by the Birla family that sought to construct a vision of India as a Hindu nation. A close examination of these sites reveals the wider dynamics underlining the transformation of modern Buddhism in India and, by extension, modern Hinduism.
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寺庙建筑与现代印度教对佛教的借鉴
摘要:在十九世纪和二十世纪,佛教深深植根于印度各地发生的一系列社会和政治辩论中。佛教在印度及其在亚洲各地传播的独特历史提供了一种思想和文化解放的模式,这种模式不仅被用来挑战殖民统治,而且还被用来推动反对现有婆罗门制度和实践的无数反种姓运动。虽然反种姓和达利特人与佛教交往的历史在很大程度上是通过讨论印度立宪主义者B.R.Ambedkar在1956年与他的大约50万追随者皈依佛教来研究的,但本文探讨了佛教如何同时被视为“印度教教派”和印度教民族主义项目的核心。它通过对Birla家族在20世纪30年代建造的几座“印度教-佛教”寺庙的规划和建设进行详细分析来做到这一点,这些寺庙试图构建印度作为一个印度教国家的愿景。对这些遗址的仔细研究揭示了印度现代佛教以及现代印度教转型的更广泛动态。
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0.90
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发文量
54
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