New Books in East Asian Studies

Matthew W. King, "In the Forest of the Blind: The Eurasian Journey of Faxian's Record of Buddhist Kingdoms" (Columbia UP, 2022)


Listen Later

What would an “anti-field history” of Buddhist Studies look like? What does the social history of knowledge look like when it both includes and exceeds the West/Nonwest binary, the ethnonational subject, the secular humanist gaze, and the moral narratives and metaphysical content of modernism? Matt W. King explores these critical questions and models innovative approaches in his second monograph, In the Forest of the Blind (Columbia University Press 2022), which uses Faxian’s Record of Buddhist Kingdoms to expose “ecologies of interpretation” in both nineteenth-century European Orientalist scholarship and Inner Asian monastic cultures.

Although Faxian’s The Record of Buddhist Kingdoms (Foguoji) is a fifth-century CE travelogue about the Chinese Buddhist monk’s journey into Central and South Asia, it later became the subject of Europe’s first study of “Buddhist Asia” in the nineteenth century in Jean-Pierre Abel-Rémusat’s Relation des Royaumes Bouddhiques, which was then translated from French into Mongolian by the Buryat scholar Dorji Banzarov, and then by the Mongolian monk Zava Damdin Lubsangdamdin from Mongolian into Tibetan.

Tracing this fascinating history of trans-Eurasian circulation of knowledge production, King argues that “the circulatory history of Faxian’s Record is not simply about Buddhist Asia forged in Europe into other places that were not Europe,” rather, the story is organized “by a chain of site-specific and differing orientations to knowledge itself – of treatments for traces of the past, of methodology.”

In six creatively organized chapters, King discusses first discusses how Faxian’s Record “orders time by means of space” in its early Chinese context, and then delves into the history of Orientalist Buddhist Studies showing how Abel-Rémusat’s “poaching” of Qing sources facilitated the disciplining of Buddhist Asia into an object of a transregional science. In Chapters 3 and 5, we see an inversion of the Orientalist gaze and learn about the reception and reinterpretation of Orientalist scholarship among the “Oriental” subjects themselves, who attempted to make sense of Buddhist history, geography, and Asia’s place and time in the world through Faxian’s Record, via Abel-Rémusat’s translation and scholarship. Here, King shows us that Abel-Rémusat’s science of Buddhist Asia was turned, or rather silenced, into chö-jung (history of the Dharma).

Unlike models from world history and transcultural studies that tend to focus on movement, contact, and exchange, In the Forest of the Blind instead focuses innovatively on connected but place-bound interpreters who hardly knew of each other and “who began anew from the silence of analytical practices staged elsewhere.” As an example of an “anti-field history,” this book, in King’s words, attempts “not to look past the fetish of the subject, but to find the disciplinary implications of centerless, overlapping, and mutually incomprehensible relations of knowledge-power that are coproductive but unbeholden to any specific relation of force (such as colonizer/colonized).” The aim of the book, King explains, is “to imagine new disciplinary futures in Buddhist and Asian studies by implicating the disciplinary present in a more diverse, global, subversive, and dispersed disciplinary past that is more attentive to negative space and absence than to impact or influence.”

Ending the book with a complete, annotated English translation of the Tibetan version of Faxian’s Record, which was translated from a Mongolian translation of the French translation of the Chinese original, In the Forest of the Blind provides the readers with rich notes about continuities and discrepancies across all four trans-Eurasian versions.

Matthew King is an Associate Professor in Transnational Buddhism in the Department of Religious Studies at the University of California, Riverside.

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/east-asian-studies

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

New Books in East Asian StudiesBy Marshall Poe

  • 4.5
  • 4.5
  • 4.5
  • 4.5
  • 4.5

4.5

57 ratings


More shows like New Books in East Asian Studies

View all
The New Yorker Radio Hour by WNYC Studios and The New Yorker

The New Yorker Radio Hour

6,780 Listeners

Economist Podcasts by The Economist

Economist Podcasts

4,189 Listeners

The Political Scene | The New Yorker by WNYC Studios and The New Yorker

The Political Scene | The New Yorker

3,998 Listeners

Fareed Zakaria GPS by CNN Podcasts

Fareed Zakaria GPS

3,413 Listeners

New Books in Philosophy by New Books Network

New Books in Philosophy

112 Listeners

New Books in History by Marshall Poe

New Books in History

210 Listeners

New Books in Military History by Marshall Poe

New Books in Military History

161 Listeners

New Books in Critical Theory by Marshall Poe

New Books in Critical Theory

147 Listeners

New Books in Religion by New Books Network

New Books in Religion

30 Listeners

New Books in Psychoanalysis by Marshall Poe

New Books in Psychoanalysis

185 Listeners

Foreign Policy Live by Foreign Policy

Foreign Policy Live

603 Listeners

New Books in African American Studies by New Books Network

New Books in African American Studies

164 Listeners

New Books in Literary Studies by New Books Network

New Books in Literary Studies

23 Listeners

New Books in Native American Studies by Marshall Poe

New Books in Native American Studies

103 Listeners

New Books in American Studies by New Books Network

New Books in American Studies

30 Listeners

New Books in Intellectual History by New Books Network

New Books in Intellectual History

61 Listeners

Sinica Podcast by Kaiser Kuo

Sinica Podcast

612 Listeners

ChinaPower by CSIS | Center for Strategic and International Studies

ChinaPower

207 Listeners

The DSR Network by The DSR Network

The DSR Network

1,757 Listeners

ChinaTalk by Jordan Schneider

ChinaTalk

288 Listeners

Interesting Times with Ross Douthat by New York Times Opinion

Interesting Times with Ross Douthat

7,070 Listeners

Pekingology by Center for Strategic and International Studies

Pekingology

142 Listeners

New Books in Chinese Studies by New Books Network

New Books in Chinese Studies

10 Listeners

The Ezra Klein Show by New York Times Opinion

The Ezra Klein Show

16,082 Listeners

Ones and Tooze by Foreign  Policy

Ones and Tooze

345 Listeners