The New East Asian Studies Podcasts in the Age of AI

Sonya S. Lee, "Surviving Nirvana: Death of the Buddha in Chinese Visual Culture," (Hong kong University Press, 2010)


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The Buddha’s nirvana marks the end of the life of a great spiritual figure and the beginning of Buddhism as a world religion. Surviving Nirvana is the first book in the English language to examine how this historic moment was represented and received in the visual culture of China. It is also a study about a pictorial image that has been in use for over 1,500 years. Mining a selection of well-documented and well-preserved examples from the sixth to twelfth centuries, Sonya Lee offers a reassessment of medieval Chinese Buddhism by focusing on practices of devotion and image-making that were inspired by the Buddha’s “complete extinction.” The nirvana image, comprised of a reclining Buddha and a mourning audience, was central to defining the local meanings of the nirvana moment in different times and places. The motif’s many guises, whether on a stone stele, inside a pagoda crypt, or as a painted mural in a cave temple, were the product of social interactions, religious institutions, and artistic practices prevalent in a given historical context. They were also cogent responses to the fundamental anxiety about the absence of the Buddha and the prospect of one’s salvation. By reinventing the nirvana image to address its own needs, each community of patrons, makers, and viewers sought to recast the Buddha’s “death” into an allegory of survival that was charged with local pride and contemporary relevance. Exhaustively researched, this study engages methods and debates from the fields of art history, religion, archaeology, architecture, and East Asian history that are relevant to both scholars and students alike. The many examples analyzed in the book offer well-defined local contexts to discuss broader historical and theoretical issues concerning representation, patronage, religion and politics, family values, and vision.


  • Nirvana in Chinese Buddhism
  • Buddha’s nirvana representation
  • Visual culture in medieval China
  • Buddhist art history
  • Devotion and image-making in Buddhism
  • Reclining Buddha imagery
  • Chinese cave temples and murals
  • Religious symbolism in Buddhism
  • Absence of Buddha and salvation
  • Art and religion in East Asia
  • Sonya Lee Surviving Nirvana
  • Nirvana image in medieval China
  • Sixth to twelfth-century Buddhist art
  • Mourning audience in nirvana art
  • Pagoda crypt imagery
  • Stone steles and Buddhist devotion
  • Local contexts in Buddhist image-making
  • Allegory of survival in Buddhist art
  • Social interactions and religious patronage
  • Family values in Chinese Buddhist art

  • ...more
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    The New East Asian Studies Podcasts in the Age of AIBy Barton Qian