Apparitions of the Self
is a groundbreaking investigation into what is known in Tibet as
"secret autobiography," an exceptional, rarely studied literary genre
that presents a personal exploration of intimate religious experiences.
In this volume, Janet Gyatso translates and studies the outstanding pair
of secret autobiographies by the famed Tibetan Buddhist visionary,
Jigme Lingpa (1730-1798), whose poetic and self-conscious writings are
as much about the nature of his own identity, memory, and the
undecidabilities of autobiographical truth as they are narrations of the
actual content of his experiences. Their translation in this book marks
the first time that works of this sort have been translated in a
Western language.
Gyatso is among the first to consider
Tibetan literature from a comparative perspective, examining the
surprising fit--as well as the misfit--of Western literary theory with
Tibetan autobiography. She examines the intriguing questions of why
Tibetan Buddhists produced so many autobiographies (far more than other
Asian Buddhists) and how autobiographical self-assertion is possible
even while Buddhists believe that the self is ultimately an illusion.
Also explored are Jigme Lingpa's historical milieu, his revelatory
visions of the ancient Tibetan dynasty, and his meditative practices of
personal cultivation. The book concludes with a study of the subversive
female figure of the "Dakini" in Jigme Lingpa's writings, and the
implications of her gender, her sexuality, and her unsettling discourse
for the autobiographical subject in Tibet.
360 pages Paperback.