Difference between revisions of "Ryan Damron"

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===Current Studies===
 
===Current Studies===
*The doctrine of ''sahaja'' (spontaneity, naturalness) among Buddhist, Vaisnava and unaffiliated tantric groups in pre-modern and modern South Asia
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*The doctrine of ''sahaja'' (spontaneity, naturalness) among Buddhist, Vaiṣṇava and unaffiliated tantric groups in pre-modern and modern South Asia
*The Kathmandu Valley as a site for tantric culture and the transmission of Buddhist Tantra to Tibet.
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*The deliberate cultivation of the power transgression as a religious practice, specifically within South Asian tantric traditions
*Tantric works composed in Sanskrit, various Prakrits and Tibetan
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*Tantric works composed in Sanskrit, various Prākrits and Tibetan
  
 
===Current Projects===
 
===Current Projects===

Revision as of 14:20, 30 August 2011

Short Biography[edit]

After nine years living in and traveling around the greater Indian Sub-Continent, Ryan has returned to the States and embarked on the long road to a PhD in South Asian Studies at UC Berkeley. When not buried under a pile of books, he can be spotted among the redwoods of Northern California or wandering the alpine regions of the Cascade and Sierra Nevada mountain ranges.

Current Studies[edit]

  • The doctrine of sahaja (spontaneity, naturalness) among Buddhist, Vaiṣṇava and unaffiliated tantric groups in pre-modern and modern South Asia
  • The deliberate cultivation of the power transgression as a religious practice, specifically within South Asian tantric traditions
  • Tantric works composed in Sanskrit, various Prākrits and Tibetan

Current Projects[edit]

  • A study and translation the Mahāmāyātantra and its commentary, the Guṇavatīṭīkā by Ratnākaraśānti

Published Works[edit]

  • Mahāmāyātantra, as part of the 84000 translation intiative (forthcoming)

Contact[edit]

rdamron@berkeley.edu