<p>Although the Western encounter with Asia&rsquo;s largest religion may be the vastest and most consequential spiritual encounter in human history its protagonists and historical development are still barely known. &nbsp;Thus it comes as no surprise that even specialists have hitherto failed to appreciate the earliest Western book about Buddhism: Michel-Jean-Fran&ccedil;ois Ozeray&rsquo;s <em>Recherches sur Buddou ou Bouddou instituteur religieux de l&rsquo;Asie orientale</em> (Paris 1817). To commemorate Ozeray&rsquo;s pioneering work on the 200th anniversary of its publication it is here presented in the original French with Urs App&rsquo;s English translation on facing pages.</p><p>In his 73-page introduction App the prize-winning author of books on the Western discovery of Asian religions presents and analyzes Ozeray&rsquo;s view of Buddhism and its founder. Tracing the author&rsquo;s main sources he explains why his book deserves to be recognized as a pioneering contribution to Western knowledge about Buddhism and to global-scale comparative religion. Published just before the onset of academic research on Buddhism in Europe Ozeray&rsquo;s work relied not on Christian missionary literature or romantic speculation but rather on figurative representations and reports furnished by ambassadors travelers and long-time residents in Asian countries. Due to its focus on living Buddhism as practised in numerous Asian countries Ozeray&rsquo;s pioneering study is&mdash;in spite of its inevitable flaws&mdash;in many respects more congruent with modern field work than the majority of popular books on Buddhism that bend the spiritualism and esotericism shelves in today&rsquo;s bookstores.</p>
Piracy-free
Assured Quality
Secure Transactions
Delivery Options
Please enter pincode to check delivery time.
*COD & Shipping Charges may apply on certain items.