Re: Textual criticism of Pali writings

From: Bryan Levman
Message: 3240
Date: 2011-04-24

Dear Steven,

Thanks for this suggestion; I am not familiar with the article and I will get it,

Best, Bryan



--- On Sat, 4/23/11, Steven Collins <scollins951@...> wrote:

From: Steven Collins <scollins951@...>
Subject: Re: [palistudy] Textual criticism of Pali writings
To: palistudy@yahoogroups.com
Received: Saturday, April 23, 2011, 7:46 PM
















 



  


    
      
      
       There is also Margaret Cone's article 'caveat lector' in JPTS XXIX 2007.



Steve Collins



--- On Sat, 4/23/11, Bryan Levman <bryan.levman@...> wrote:



> From: Bryan Levman <bryan.levman@...>

> Subject: Re: [palistudy] Textual criticism of Pali writings

> To: palistudy@yahoogroups.com

> Date: Saturday, April 23, 2011, 1:42 PM

> Dear Eugen,

>

> Thanks very much for your response and helpful suggestions.

> Of course I am very familiar with Norman and von Hinueber's

> work. Von Hinueber was in Toronto this past weekend at a

> Conference on Buddhist Nuns sponsored by the Numata and I

> discussed some of the problems with him.

>

> The articles you recommended in the Thai Journal look right

> on topic. I was not able to locate the journal articles on

> the net. Do you know if they're available?

>

> Do you know where Norman makes the plea for re-editing the

> PTS? I have his complete works here. Also any other

> references you can give for the works of Silk or Burnouf on

> textual criticism would be appreciated. As someone whose

> primary work is with Buddhist texts (my area of research is

> the earliest recoverable language of Buddhism and the

> process of its transmission) I have long accepted the state

> of our texts as a "given", but it is becoming more and more

> apparent to me, that we can not just leave it at that,

>

> Warm regards, Bryan

>

>

> --- On Sat, 4/23/11, Eugen Ciurtin <eu.s.ciurtin@...>

> wrote:

>

> From: Eugen Ciurtin <eu.s.ciurtin@...>

> Subject: Re: [palistudy] Textual criticism of Pali

> writings

> To: palistudy@yahoogroups.com

> Received: Saturday, April 23, 2011, 12:49 PM

>

> Dear Bryan,

>

> To offer a (small indeed) suggestion to your (so broad!)

> question, I would

> like to point out the first, 2009 issue of the *Thai

> International Journal

> of Buddhist Studies*, especially the contributions by

> Nalini Balbir and

> Richard Gombrich, which are among the freshest and as a

> matter of fact the

> most excellent and up to date. Prof. Balbir's article

> includes further

> thoughts on this crucial topic, including a more feasible

> project of

> critically editing *separate* suttas for which we do have

> enough textual

> variants. As you well know, intense re-reading of Profs K R

> Norman (with his

> outstanding plea for reediting most of the PTS editions)

> and Oskar von

> Hinüber's (including on the earliest Mln MS) longlife

> oeuvres may correctly

> posit this inquiry. But there are indeed joint academic

> programs for

> completing this huge task?

>

> The comparison you suggests with some 'religions of the

> Book' is not only

> apt: it deserved highly persuasive arguments for broadening

> the scope and

> academic presence of Buddhist Studies in general, in some

> recent

> publications of Prof Jonathan Silk. However, it goes

> sometimes unnoticed, it

> seems, that when we try (sometimes hard) to cast off those

> "Protestant

> presuppositions" once recurrent in Buddhist studies, we are

> still inspired

> by methods employed in earlier periods for other textual

> traditions, with

> the well-balanced aim at recovering what one recent Berlin

> program coined as

> 'Zukunftphilologie'. And from this angle your question, and

> the project as

> such, has its roots in Burnouf's works (published and still

> unpublished).

>

> with every good wish

> Eugen

>

> 2011/4/23 Bryan Levman <bryan.levman@...>

>

> >

> >

> > Dear Friends,

> >

> > Vis a vis Ven. Yuttadhammo's discussion on textual

> forms, is anyone aware

> > of any academic work done on the subject of Pali

> textual criticism - i. e.

> > the origin and nature of the texts that have come down

> to us, the relation

> > and differences between them, the process of oral and

> written textual

> > transmission, reconciliation of variants, etc?

> >

> > In the field of the Jewish/Christian bible, an

> enormous amount of work has

> > been done in this area, but they have manuscripts

> dating back to the 2nd and

> > 3rd century BC, whereas most of our manuscripts are

> quite recent. I believe

> > the oldest Pali manuscript is only about 450 years

> old, although we have

> > recensions of the Dhammapada from the first and/or

> second century A. D.

> > written in Gandhari.

> >

> > If anyone knows any scholarly work done on this

> subject I would appreciate

> > a reference(s),

> >

> > Thanks,

> >

> > Bryan

> >

> > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

> >

> >

> >

>

>

>

> --

> --

> Dr E. Ciurtin

> Secretary of the Romanian Association for the History of

> Religions

> http://ihr-acad.academia.edu/EugenCiurtin

>

> Publications Officer of the European Association for the

> Study of Religions

> www.easr.eu

>

> Lecturer & Secretary of the Scientific Council

> Institute for the History of Religions, Romanian Academy

> Calea 13 Septembrie no. 13 sect. 5, Bucharest 050711

> Phone: +40 733 951 953 or +40 721 877 659

> www.ihr-acad.ro

>

>

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