Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

The Tantra Team at Univ. of Rochester

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

University of Rochester is home to two of the world's

leading authorities on an often misunderstood religious

tradition.

 

by Scott Hauser

The Rochester Review

Spring, 2006

 

[....] Douglas Brooks and Paul Muller-Ortega, two top

scholars of South Asian religions at the University, [...[

[are] among those [scholars] who study Tantra, a commonly

misunderstood tradition that dates to the India of about

1,500 years ago.

 

Thanks to internecine sniping between and among Indian

traditions, what began as a reformist religious approach

within Hinduism had been neglected-if not actively

suppressed-by the keepers of the canon, who often

characterized it as little more than a seamy backroom in the

mansion of Hindu thought. The little that was known about

the tradition in the West came to scholars, for the most part,

through its critics.

 

That is, until people like Brooks and Muller-Ortega began to

get curious about how such a profoundly nuanced and

influential spiritual outlook could have been painted so one-

sidedly.

 

" Tantra is not just a lost chapter, " says Muller-Ortega, a

professor in the Department of Religion and Classics. " It's

more like finding an entire lost 'book' of Indian religion.

There was a tendency among scholars to skip hundreds and

hundreds of years of Indian religious and spiritual life. . . .

and then finding thousands and thousands of texts that have

been largely ignored in the construction of modern

Hinduism. "

 

Over the past 20 years-Brooks joined the College faculty

in 1986; Muller-Ortega in 1997-the two have built

international reputations as scholars who are among the

leading interpreters of Tantra's history, traditions, and

influence.

 

Muller-Ortega specializes in the emergence of Tantric

thought in northern India through the first millennium of the

Common Era. He's a leading specialist on Kashmir

Shaivism, a branch of Tantra that evolved around the Hindu

god Shiva and his consort, the goddess Shakti.

 

Brooks is a pioneering expert in Tantra's later manifestation

in southern India, which centered around Shakti as a

goddess in her own right. He traces the tradition as it arose

in medieval India, becoming the first American to

definitively analyze its influence on the emergence of the

goddess tradition known as Shrividya.

 

" Paul and I are both interested in the 1 percent of Tantra that

might be called the philosophically sophisticated and

contemplative forms, but at two different stages of its

evolution and regional development, " Brooks says. " Our

subject was probably the last frontier in Asian religions. For

better or for worse, if you want to study in these fields [in

English], you have to enter through our work. "

 

" They are the groundbreaking U.S. scholars in Kashmir

Shaivism and its evolution in South India, " says David

Gordon White, a professor of South Asian religions at the

University of California at Santa Barbara.

 

As teachers in the Department of Religion and Classics,

Brooks and Muller-Ortega have helped introduce a new

generation to the study of spiritual ideas as a way for

students to better understand themselves and those around

them. In courses that often require a passing introduction to

Sanskrit and that often rely on student readings of

original-and at times paradox-filled-texts, Brooks and

Muller-Ortega teach not only on Tantra, but classes on

Hinduism, Buddhism, Confucianism, Zen, and other

historical, social, and cultural veins of Asian spirituality.

 

The subjects seem to resonate with college students, who

have made the pair's classes among the most popular at

Rochester. In 2002, Brooks received the Goergen Award for

Distinguished Achievement and Artistry in Undergraduate

Teaching, the College's annual recognition of outstanding

teachers.

 

Chris Wallis '01, who is studying for a Ph.D. in religious

studies with a focus on medieval Tantric philosophy at U.C.

Santa Barbara, says he was interested in Asian religions

when he was looking for an undergraduate program. He

enrolled at Rochester, he says, to study with Muller-Ortega

and Brooks.

 

" They are engaged in the tradition culturally and spiritually

in ways that go way beyond the merely intellectual, " says

Wallis, who went on to earn a master's degree in Sanskrit

language and Indian literature at the University of California

at Berkeley and another master's in Indian religion and

philosophy at Oxford University. " They are true scholars in

that they search for truth honestly and without introducing

their own presuppositions, but they do it from within the

perspectives of the tradition. "

 

The tradition of Tantra has fascinated several generations in

the West, especially some lay people who seem to be on the

lookout for a less-than-rigorous road to spiritual liberation.

But, scholars say, from adventurers like Sir Richard Burton

in the late 1800s to the host of " tantric sex " manuals on

offer in the how-to section of today's book stores or on the

Web, the tradition has been widely misunderstood,

misappropriated, and mischaracterized.

 

From its first appearance in the theological literature of

India in middle of the first millennium, Tantra has defied

easy classification. Introduced as a new category of

" revealed scripture, " the tradition began as a counterpoint to

the Hindu Vedas, the traditional scriptural core of mantras

and rituals that date as far back as 2,000 B.C.E. and that

were believed to provide access to divinity.

 

Originally meaning " that which extends knowledge, " Tantra

offered practitioners an approach based on accessing a

divine energy that courses throughout the universe and

that's contained in all experience. Tantrikas-as those who

practiced were known-suggested that spiritual liberation

was attainable not through the ascetic notion of distancing

themselves from the corporeal world but by embracing the

world in the proper spiritual context.

 

Grounded in the guru-adept model in which a qualified

teacher initiates students into a set of rituals, deities,

meditation, and physical practices, including particular

forms of yoga, the tradition involves more than scripture.

 

As White puts it in a 2000 book, Tantra in Practice, a

collection of essays to which both Muller-Ortega and

Brooks contributed:

 

" Tantra is that Asian body of beliefs and practices which,

working from the principle that the universe we experience

is nothing other than the concrete manifestation of the

divine energy of the godhead that creates and maintains that

universe, seeks to ritually appropriate and channel that

energy, within the human microcosm in creative and

emancipatory ways. "

 

According to Tantric tradition, that energy can be found by

those who are willing to commit to looking for it in the right

ways, says Brooks. It exists even in desires that most ascetic

traditions aim to shun or that Western traditions consider

all-too-Earthly temptations, including the desire to have sex

or the desire to live a comfortable life.

 

Liberation is found not by divorcing yourself from the

world but, in a spiritual sense, by looking deep into the core

of desire, pain, and all the turmoil that comes with existing

as a sentient human being. Once properly accessed, the

energy that drives that turmoil can be understood and

appreciated as part of a more-encompassing divinity

inherent in all creation.

 

Says Brooks: " The great Tantric philosophers invite us to

imagine ourselves and our world in ways that we've never

considered-that the divine is woven into every thought,

every desire, every action. "

 

Such an integrative and holistic understanding seems very

modern to most people now, Brooks says. But when it was

introduced to a tradition that valued asceticism as the path to

spiritual growth, Tantra was a startling revelation.

 

Religion and Classics

 

Over the past six years, between 65 and 81 students each

year were officially declared majors in the Department of

Religion and Classics, making it one of the most popular

humanities programs in the College of Arts, Sciences, and

Engineering.

 

Another 20 or so regularly declare a minor in the

department.

 

Among the humanities, in which about 19 percent of all

students choose to focus their academic work in the College,

only English attracts more students as a major.

 

When it comes to clusters-sets of at least three interrelated

courses outside their majors that students in the College

must select from the broad areas of the humanities, social

sciences, and physical sciences-many undergraduates also

turn to religion and classics. There are typically more

declared clusters in religion and classics than any other

humanities program with the exception of philosophy and,

in some years, music, according to the College Center for

Academic Support.

 

Founded in the early 1980s, the department is considered a

leader in higher education for its unique combination of the

study of the world's great religions with the languages of

their canons.

Says Muller-Ortega: " This is the opposite of the ascetic

tradition. There are spiritual traditions that are negative in

their appraisal of the world, and there are traditions that are

positive in their appraisal of the world. The Tantric tradition

is positive in its appraisal. "

 

Many scholars, Brooks and Muller-Ortega among them,

argue that the main ideas of that worldview found resonance

throughout Asia, influencing the history of Hinduism,

Buddhism, Jainism, and other religions over the past 1,500

years.

 

As the influence of Tantra spread, tensions arose between

some who called themselves Tantrikas and leaders of other

traditions, who found it easy to disparage Tantra's more

esoteric rituals as little more than " black magic. "

 

" Part of its bad reputation is that the Tantrikas are willing to

broach subjects that everybody is interested in, but that

nobody is willing to ask about, " Brooks says, noting that

scholars today recognize that the most highly regarded

Indian philosophers of the first 1,000 years of the Common

Era were Tantrics.

 

Both Muller-Ortega and Brooks were first introduced to the

tradition as spiritual seekers themselves and both practice a

form of the tradition. Brooks encountered Tantra during his

junior year at Middlebury College as an exchange student in

India, a country to which he has returned many times.

 

After graduation, he pursued a master's of divinity degree in

language study at Harvard, followed by a Ph.D. in religion.

 

His advisor suggested he write about Tantra in South Indian

goddess cults for his dissertation.

 

" The real difficulty I had was persuading the Hinduism

scholars at Harvard that I wasn't making it all up, " he says.

" Eventually they agreed to let me venture into uncharted

territory. "

 

Muller-Ortega was a student at Yale when he began to study

yoga and meditation. He continued with his meditation

studies after graduation, completing intense monastic

retreats in Switzerland and on the island of Majorca. As a

student in the doctoral program at Santa Barbara, his advisor

suggested he try to translate the work of Abhinavagupta, a

medieval guru and philosopher whose writings were

unknown in the West and, more important, had been all but

forgotten in India.

 

Muller-Ortega became fascinated by Abhinavagupta's

teachings about consciousness, the nature of reality, and

their connections to the concept of god as denoted by the

name Shiva. In traditional Hinduism, Shiva is understood to

be part of a male trinity in which he plays the role of cosmic

destroyer, reabsorbing creation back into the godhead.

 

Abhinavagupta has a more nuanced understanding of Shiva

as a name for absolute consciousness, one that divinely

creates, maintains, absorbs, conceals, and reveals all reality.

The nature of Shiva begins with Shakti, his goddess consort.

Shakti expresses Shiva's power, although it is understood

that Shakti and Shiva are two aspects of a single reality.

 

" Tantrics believe that human beings contain levels of reality

that you are not ordinarily aware of, " Muller-Ortega says,

and through specific practices, these levels of reality can

become active.

 

" The tradition says that you have power, or shakti, within

you that can be activated and turned on. This process

transforms you. The mind changes, the body changes, the

emotions change. "

 

In medieval times, the Tantric teachings migrated to South

India, where Shakti was worshiped independently as a

goddess. And the understanding of both consciousness and

cosmos as expressed through the goddess and her worship is

the scholarly focus of Brooks.

 

According to Brooks, Tantra aims to access shakti. In

contrast to Western religious ideas, in Tantra goodness does

not lead to greatness, as in the equation of morality leading

to saintliness. Rather, Tantra teaches that becoming

powerful-properly cultivating the powers of the body,

mind, and heart-creates the potential for goodness and a

greatly expanded experience of each indivdual's humanity.

 

The ideas at the heart of Tantra have appealed to scholars

and seekers for the past 1,500 years, Brooks and Muller-

Ortega say, so they're not surprised that students and lay

people of the 21st century find meaning in the tradition.

 

But as teachers and scholars, they're most interested in the

power of all religious traditions to open doors to the study

of humanity.

 

" The Tantrics begin with a spiritual paradigm, " says

Brooks. " I'm not you; I'm not like you; I'm nothing but

you.

 

" Think about that: 'I'm not you,' because we're different

people, " he says. " 'I'm not like you,' because we think and

feel and understand the world in different ways. But 'I'm

nothing but you,' because we're all part of the same

creation. How can that be?

 

" That's what you try to understand when you study

religion. "

 

http://www.rochester.edu/pr/Review/V68N3/feature3.html

Link to comment
Share on other sites

nice

 

 

 

msbauju <msbauju

 

Friday, November 2, 2007 11:32:20 PM

The Tantra Team at Univ. of Rochester

 

University of Rochester is home to two of the world's

leading authorities on an often misunderstood religious

tradition.

 

by Scott Hauser

The Rochester Review

Spring, 2006

 

[....] Douglas Brooks and Paul Muller-Ortega, two top

scholars of South Asian religions at the University, [...[

[are] among those [scholars] who study Tantra, a commonly

misunderstood tradition that dates to the India of about

1,500 years ago.

 

Thanks to internecine sniping between and among Indian

traditions, what began as a reformist religious approach

within Hinduism had been neglected-if not actively

suppressed-by the keepers of the canon, who often

characterized it as little more than a seamy backroom in the

mansion of Hindu thought. The little that was known about

the tradition in the West came to scholars, for the most part,

through its critics.

 

That is, until people like Brooks and Muller-Ortega began to

get curious about how such a profoundly nuanced and

influential spiritual outlook could have been painted so one-

sidedly.

 

" Tantra is not just a lost chapter, " says Muller-Ortega, a

professor in the Department of Religion and Classics. " It's

more like finding an entire lost 'book' of Indian religion.

There was a tendency among scholars to skip hundreds and

hundreds of years of Indian religious and spiritual life. . . .

and then finding thousands and thousands of texts that have

been largely ignored in the construction of modern

Hinduism. "

 

Over the past 20 years-Brooks joined the College faculty

in 1986; Muller-Ortega in 1997-the two have built

international reputations as scholars who are among the

leading interpreters of Tantra's history, traditions, and

influence.

 

Muller-Ortega specializes in the emergence of Tantric

thought in northern India through the first millennium of the

Common Era. He's a leading specialist on Kashmir

Shaivism, a branch of Tantra that evolved around the Hindu

god Shiva and his consort, the goddess Shakti.

 

Brooks is a pioneering expert in Tantra's later manifestation

in southern India, which centered around Shakti as a

goddess in her own right. He traces the tradition as it arose

in medieval India, becoming the first American to

definitively analyze its influence on the emergence of the

goddess tradition known as Shrividya.

 

" Paul and I are both interested in the 1 percent of Tantra that

might be called the philosophically sophisticated and

contemplative forms, but at two different stages of its

evolution and regional development, " Brooks says. " Our

subject was probably the last frontier in Asian religions. For

better or for worse, if you want to study in these fields [in

English], you have to enter through our work. "

 

" They are the groundbreaking U.S. scholars in Kashmir

Shaivism and its evolution in South India, " says David

Gordon White, a professor of South Asian religions at the

University of California at Santa Barbara.

 

As teachers in the Department of Religion and Classics,

Brooks and Muller-Ortega have helped introduce a new

generation to the study of spiritual ideas as a way for

students to better understand themselves and those around

them. In courses that often require a passing introduction to

Sanskrit and that often rely on student readings of

original-and at times paradox-filled- texts, Brooks and

Muller-Ortega teach not only on Tantra, but classes on

Hinduism, Buddhism, Confucianism, Zen, and other

historical, social, and cultural veins of Asian spirituality.

 

The subjects seem to resonate with college students, who

have made the pair's classes among the most popular at

Rochester. In 2002, Brooks received the Goergen Award for

Distinguished Achievement and Artistry in Undergraduate

Teaching, the College's annual recognition of outstanding

teachers.

 

Chris Wallis '01, who is studying for a Ph.D. in religious

studies with a focus on medieval Tantric philosophy at U.C.

Santa Barbara, says he was interested in Asian religions

when he was looking for an undergraduate program. He

enrolled at Rochester, he says, to study with Muller-Ortega

and Brooks.

 

" They are engaged in the tradition culturally and spiritually

in ways that go way beyond the merely intellectual, " says

Wallis, who went on to earn a master's degree in Sanskrit

language and Indian literature at the University of California

at Berkeley and another master's in Indian religion and

philosophy at Oxford University. " They are true scholars in

that they search for truth honestly and without introducing

their own presuppositions, but they do it from within the

perspectives of the tradition. "

 

The tradition of Tantra has fascinated several generations in

the West, especially some lay people who seem to be on the

lookout for a less-than-rigorous road to spiritual liberation.

But, scholars say, from adventurers like Sir Richard Burton

in the late 1800s to the host of " tantric sex " manuals on

offer in the how-to section of today's book stores or on the

Web, the tradition has been widely misunderstood,

misappropriated, and mischaracterized.

 

From its first appearance in the theological literature of

India in middle of the first millennium, Tantra has defied

easy classification. Introduced as a new category of

" revealed scripture, " the tradition began as a counterpoint to

the Hindu Vedas, the traditional scriptural core of mantras

and rituals that date as far back as 2,000 B.C.E. and that

were believed to provide access to divinity.

 

Originally meaning " that which extends knowledge, " Tantra

offered practitioners an approach based on accessing a

divine energy that courses throughout the universe and

that's contained in all experience. Tantrikas-as those who

practiced were known-suggested that spiritual liberation

was attainable not through the ascetic notion of distancing

themselves from the corporeal world but by embracing the

world in the proper spiritual context.

 

Grounded in the guru-adept model in which a qualified

teacher initiates students into a set of rituals, deities,

meditation, and physical practices, including particular

forms of yoga, the tradition involves more than scripture.

 

As White puts it in a 2000 book, Tantra in Practice, a

collection of essays to which both Muller-Ortega and

Brooks contributed:

 

" Tantra is that Asian body of beliefs and practices which,

working from the principle that the universe we experience

is nothing other than the concrete manifestation of the

divine energy of the godhead that creates and maintains that

universe, seeks to ritually appropriate and channel that

energy, within the human microcosm in creative and

emancipatory ways. "

 

According to Tantric tradition, that energy can be found by

those who are willing to commit to looking for it in the right

ways, says Brooks. It exists even in desires that most ascetic

traditions aim to shun or that Western traditions consider

all-too-Earthly temptations, including the desire to have sex

or the desire to live a comfortable life.

 

Liberation is found not by divorcing yourself from the

world but, in a spiritual sense, by looking deep into the core

of desire, pain, and all the turmoil that comes with existing

as a sentient human being. Once properly accessed, the

energy that drives that turmoil can be understood and

appreciated as part of a more-encompassing divinity

inherent in all creation.

 

Says Brooks: " The great Tantric philosophers invite us to

imagine ourselves and our world in ways that we've never

considered-that the divine is woven into every thought,

every desire, every action. "

 

Such an integrative and holistic understanding seems very

modern to most people now, Brooks says. But when it was

introduced to a tradition that valued asceticism as the path to

spiritual growth, Tantra was a startling revelation.

 

Religion and Classics

 

Over the past six years, between 65 and 81 students each

year were officially declared majors in the Department of

Religion and Classics, making it one of the most popular

humanities programs in the College of Arts, Sciences, and

Engineering.

 

Another 20 or so regularly declare a minor in the

department.

 

Among the humanities, in which about 19 percent of all

students choose to focus their academic work in the College,

only English attracts more students as a major.

 

When it comes to clusters-sets of at least three interrelated

courses outside their majors that students in the College

must select from the broad areas of the humanities, social

sciences, and physical sciences-many undergraduates also

turn to religion and classics. There are typically more

declared clusters in religion and classics than any other

humanities program with the exception of philosophy and,

in some years, music, according to the College Center for

Academic Support.

 

Founded in the early 1980s, the department is considered a

leader in higher education for its unique combination of the

study of the world's great religions with the languages of

their canons.

Says Muller-Ortega: " This is the opposite of the ascetic

tradition. There are spiritual traditions that are negative in

their appraisal of the world, and there are traditions that are

positive in their appraisal of the world. The Tantric tradition

is positive in its appraisal. "

 

Many scholars, Brooks and Muller-Ortega among them,

argue that the main ideas of that worldview found resonance

throughout Asia, influencing the history of Hinduism,

Buddhism, Jainism, and other religions over the past 1,500

years.

 

As the influence of Tantra spread, tensions arose between

some who called themselves Tantrikas and leaders of other

traditions, who found it easy to disparage Tantra's more

esoteric rituals as little more than " black magic. "

 

" Part of its bad reputation is that the Tantrikas are willing to

broach subjects that everybody is interested in, but that

nobody is willing to ask about, " Brooks says, noting that

scholars today recognize that the most highly regarded

Indian philosophers of the first 1,000 years of the Common

Era were Tantrics.

 

Both Muller-Ortega and Brooks were first introduced to the

tradition as spiritual seekers themselves and both practice a

form of the tradition. Brooks encountered Tantra during his

junior year at Middlebury College as an exchange student in

India, a country to which he has returned many times.

 

After graduation, he pursued a master's of divinity degree in

language study at Harvard, followed by a Ph.D. in religion.

 

His advisor suggested he write about Tantra in South Indian

goddess cults for his dissertation.

 

" The real difficulty I had was persuading the Hinduism

scholars at Harvard that I wasn't making it all up, " he says.

" Eventually they agreed to let me venture into uncharted

territory. "

 

Muller-Ortega was a student at Yale when he began to study

yoga and meditation. He continued with his meditation

studies after graduation, completing intense monastic

retreats in Switzerland and on the island of Majorca. As a

student in the doctoral program at Santa Barbara, his advisor

suggested he try to translate the work of Abhinavagupta, a

medieval guru and philosopher whose writings were

unknown in the West and, more important, had been all but

forgotten in India.

 

Muller-Ortega became fascinated by Abhinavagupta' s

teachings about consciousness, the nature of reality, and

their connections to the concept of god as denoted by the

name Shiva. In traditional Hinduism, Shiva is understood to

be part of a male trinity in which he plays the role of cosmic

destroyer, reabsorbing creation back into the godhead.

 

Abhinavagupta has a more nuanced understanding of Shiva

as a name for absolute consciousness, one that divinely

creates, maintains, absorbs, conceals, and reveals all reality.

The nature of Shiva begins with Shakti, his goddess consort.

Shakti expresses Shiva's power, although it is understood

that Shakti and Shiva are two aspects of a single reality.

 

" Tantrics believe that human beings contain levels of reality

that you are not ordinarily aware of, " Muller-Ortega says,

and through specific practices, these levels of reality can

become active.

 

" The tradition says that you have power, or shakti, within

you that can be activated and turned on. This process

transforms you. The mind changes, the body changes, the

emotions change. "

 

In medieval times, the Tantric teachings migrated to South

India, where Shakti was worshiped independently as a

goddess. And the understanding of both consciousness and

cosmos as expressed through the goddess and her worship is

the scholarly focus of Brooks.

 

According to Brooks, Tantra aims to access shakti. In

contrast to Western religious ideas, in Tantra goodness does

not lead to greatness, as in the equation of morality leading

to saintliness. Rather, Tantra teaches that becoming

powerful-properly cultivating the powers of the body,

mind, and heart-creates the potential for goodness and a

greatly expanded experience of each indivdual's humanity.

 

The ideas at the heart of Tantra have appealed to scholars

and seekers for the past 1,500 years, Brooks and Muller-

Ortega say, so they're not surprised that students and lay

people of the 21st century find meaning in the tradition.

 

But as teachers and scholars, they're most interested in the

power of all religious traditions to open doors to the study

of humanity.

 

" The Tantrics begin with a spiritual paradigm, " says

Brooks. " I'm not you; I'm not like you; I'm nothing but

you.

 

" Think about that: 'I'm not you,' because we're different

people, " he says. " 'I'm not like you,' because we think and

feel and understand the world in different ways. But 'I'm

nothing but you,' because we're all part of the same

creation. How can that be?

 

" That's what you try to understand when you study

religion. "

 

http://www.rocheste r.edu/pr/ Review/V68N3/ feature3. html

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...