Ryan Damron: Difference between revisions

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==Short Biography==
==Short Biography==
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.  He is also a member of the [[Dharmachakra Translation Committee]] and the director of the Center for Translation and Translation Studies at Rangjung Yeshe Gomde California.  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.
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.  He is also a member of the [[Dharmachakra Translation Committee]] and the director of the Center for Translation and Translation Studies at Rangjung Yeshe Gomde California.  When not buried under a pile of books, he can be found in the redwoods of Northern California or wandering the alpine regions of the Cascade and Sierra Nevada mountain ranges.


===Current Studies===
===Current Studies===

Latest revision as of 13:23, 30 August 2011

Short Biography

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. He is also a member of the Dharmachakra Translation Committee and the director of the Center for Translation and Translation Studies at Rangjung Yeshe Gomde California. When not buried under a pile of books, he can be found in the redwoods of Northern California or wandering the alpine regions of the Cascade and Sierra Nevada mountain ranges.

Current Studies

  • 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

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

Published Works

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

Contact

rdamron@berkeley.edu