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From: H-Net Staff via H-REVIEW <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, Aug 11, 2020 at 7:45 PM
Subject: H-Net Review [H-Buddhism]: Esler on Caple, 'Morality and Monastic
Revival in Post-Mao Tibet'
To: <[email protected]>
Cc: H-Net Staff <[email protected]>


Jane E. Caple.  Morality and Monastic Revival in Post-Mao Tibet.
Honolulu  University of Hawaii Press, 2019.  x + 218 pp.  $65.00
(cloth), ISBN 978-0-8248-6984-7; $29.00 (paper), ISBN
978-0-8248-6985-4.

Reviewed by Joshua Esler (Sheridan College, The University of Western
Australia)
Published on H-Buddhism (August, 2020)
Commissioned by Jessica Zu

Jane Capel's 2019 book, _Morality and Monastic Revival in Post-Mao
Tibet_, examines the revival of monasticism (mostly within the Geluk
school) in Rebgong and western Bayen in Amdo (Qinghai Province) from
2008 to 2015, at sixteen lesser-known scholastic monasteries. Her
fieldwork is based on 137 interviews and informal conversations with
a wide variety of interlocutors including monastics, nonmonastic
specialists, farmers, herders, artisans, businesspeople, students,
teachers, and government officials. Her focus on the lived
experiences of these individuals rather than solely on grand
narratives of the state, economic development, tourism, and the
Tibetan community in exile in relation to monastic revival provides a
nuanced, emic exploration of localized understandings of these and
other relevant issues. In Capel's words, her study pays "attention to
local logics of the good and the desirable in an attempt to
understand its dynamics from the ground up" (p. 4). We learn from
monastic and lay Tibetans themselves about some of the complexities
regarding issues such as the self-sufficiency of monasteries: is the
state simply aligning monasteries with its designs to build a modern
socialist state, or are there moralistic and pragmatic concerns which
come from within the monastic setting that are also driving
monasteries toward self-sufficiency? Capel similarly explores other
important issues through local narratives, such as the relationship
of tourism to monastic revival, economic development and monastic
recruitment and retention, and the future of monasticism in relation
to these issues.

The place of tourism in relation to the monastic revival is examined
carefully, not only as a revenue-generating initiative that may
impact the routine and education of monks but as a break from
Tibetan-initiated self-sufficiency projects that allow for greater
autonomy from the state, in opposition to tourism, which may give
local officials greater control of monasteries. Further, Capel
examines in detail the perceptions of monastics regarding different
types of tourists, as either nuisances or potential patrons, and the
sometimes blurred distinction between "tourist" and "pilgrim." The
reasons for the decline in the number of monks at monasteries are
also brought to light through the personal stories of monks who have
either disrobed or entered the monastery at a later stage in life.
While a simplistic narrative of the temptations of modern life
appears at first glance to explain the reason for monks disrobing and
entering lay life, Capel skillfully draws out the many complexities
of moralistic and pragmatic approaches to this subject from among her
interlocutors. Similarly, Capel employs a balanced approach to the
"quality versus quantity" debate in relation to the number of monks
at monasteries and the subsequent quality of their education,
discipline, and retention, taking account not only of state efforts
to reduce monastic populations but also the ideas of her monastic
interlocutors concerning this issue, as well as exiled Tibetan
discourses.

Unbeknown perhaps to some readers, sources of monastic revival that
are rarely touched upon in other academic works or state publications
on the subject are acknowledged. For instance, we learn that much of
the impetus, materials, and funding for the reconstruction of
monasteries and the education of monastics has come from the lay
Tibetan community, or through gifts bestowed on incarnate lamas who
have subsequently funded various projects. The state has been less of
a player in this revival than is often imagined and portrayed in
state publications. Similarly, the input of outside investors such as
Chinese patrons (businesspeople and/or practitioners of Tibetan
Buddhism), while significant, does not constitute the core of the
ongoing developments in the monastic revival, according to Capel's
interlocutors, who variously even reject such investment in favor of
internal economic initiatives that give them more control over their
own affairs.

Capel's carefully researched book is to be applauded for its close
attention to the variety of perspectives it offers on the monastic
revival in Amdo, and for the way in which it compares and contrasts
this revival across a network of monasteries rather than examining
individual monastic revivals in isolation. One minor suggestion is to
perhaps include a map of this monastic network to guide visually
oriented readers, as at times the geographic position of monasteries
in relation to each other is hard to track as one progresses through
the book.

While Capel does acknowledge the state and its discourses as
pervasive, she sometimes does not appear to fully acknowledge the
extent of this pervasiveness. She makes mention of the fact that the
state was of course the instigator of destruction of monasteries
during the Cultural Revolution, but claims that it is rarely seen as
having any significant input in the monastic revival. While this may
indeed be true, the implicit influence of state rhetoric of
self-sufficiency among interlocutors may not be sufficiently
acknowledged, given that they are speaking with a foreign academic in
a tightly controlled political environment. Further, while Capel does
recognize tensions between monastic and state worldviews, and makes
reference to the 150 self-immolations of monastic and lay Tibetans
since February 2009, she does not mention the patriotic education
that has been implemented at Tibetan monasteries following the 2008
protests, examined in John Power's 2016 book, _The Buddha Party: How
the People's Republic of China Works to Define and Control Tibetan
Buddhism_. Acknowledging the tensions explored in Power's work would
have perhaps added value to discussions on monastic perspectives in
relation to the state.

Citation: Joshua Esler. Review of Caple, Jane E., _Morality and
Monastic Revival in Post-Mao Tibet_. H-Buddhism, H-Net Reviews.
August, 2020.
URL: https://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=55292

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States
License.




-- 
Best regards,

Andrew Stewart

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