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Illness and Immortality: Mantra, Mandala, and Meditation in the Netra Tantra

✍ Scribed by Patricia Sauthoff


Publisher
Oxford University Press
Year
2022
Tongue
English
Leaves
241
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


Illness and Immortality examines a medieval Sanskrit text, the Netra Tantra, which is devoted to health and healing through a yogic practice dedicated to the chanting of mantras, the building of mandalas, and meditation. Patricia Sauthoff examines the role of such ritual elements in rites to
alleviate illness and death. She includes analysis of the various forms of the deity Amrtesa or MrtyuΓ±jaya (Conqueror of Death), the nature of mantra, and the relationship between the tantric practitioner and the patient. This work explores what is meant by immortality within the medieval context
and how one goes about attaining it. It asks how ritual alleviates illness, what role the deity plays in health and healing, and finally who has access to the rites described within the text. Central to this study is the conception of a body vulnerable to demons and reliant on deities for continued
existence, and how the three yogic bodies (sthula, suksma, and para) play a role in physical and spiritual well-being. Featuring new translations of large sections of the Netra Tantra, the book offers readers various points of entry into the text so that tantric practitioners and scholars alike can
access the influential and important concepts and practices found within this long-revered but under-studied work.

✦ Table of Contents


Cover
Illness and Immortality
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
Introduction
1. The Mantra: OαΉƒ JuαΉƒ SaαΈ₯
2. Language, Physicality, and Mantra
3. Iconography: Forms of AmαΉ›teΕ›a and MαΉ›tyujit
4. Identity and Purity
5. Initiation
6. Religion of Monarchs
7. Conquering Death Through Ritual
8. MaαΉ‡αΈŠalas
9. Visualizing AmαΉ›ta: SvT 7.207–225
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index


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