Difference between revisions of "Krug, A."
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{{Person | {{Person | ||
+ | |affiliation=84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha | ||
+ | |phduniversity=University of California at Santa Barbara | ||
+ | |education=*Ph.D. Religious Studies, University of California, Santa Barbara 2018 Buddhist Studies, South Asian Religions | ||
+ | *M.A. Indo-Tibetan Buddhism with Language Concentrations in Sanskrit 2010 and Tibetan, Naropa University | ||
+ | *M.A. Thesis: “A Study in Dhāraṇī: Magic and Philosophy in the Mahāyāna, Language and Ineffability of the Absolute, and Applying Pragmatics to the Interpretation of Dhāraṇī” | ||
+ | *B.A. Religious Studies, Vassar College 2002 | ||
|MainNamePhon=Adam Krug | |MainNamePhon=Adam Krug | ||
|SortName=Krug, Adam | |SortName=Krug, Adam | ||
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Latest revision as of 14:41, 15 August 2022
English Phonetics | Adam Krug |
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Sort Name | Krug, Adam |
Tibetan calendar dates
- Primary Affiliation (Workplace)
- 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha
PhD University
- University of California at Santa Barbara
Education
- Ph.D. Religious Studies, University of California, Santa Barbara 2018 Buddhist Studies, South Asian Religions
- M.A. Indo-Tibetan Buddhism with Language Concentrations in Sanskrit 2010 and Tibetan, Naropa University
- M.A. Thesis: “A Study in Dhāraṇī: Magic and Philosophy in the Mahāyāna, Language and Ineffability of the Absolute, and Applying Pragmatics to the Interpretation of Dhāraṇī”
- B.A. Religious Studies, Vassar College 2002
Biographical Information
Adam’s dissertation, "The Seven Siddhi Texts: The Oḍiyāna Mahāmudrā Lineage in its Indic and Tibetan Contexts," focuses on an early corpus of Vajrayāna Buddhist texts that came to be known in Nepal and Tibet as part of a larger canon of Indian works on ‘the great seal’ or mahāmudrā. In addition to providing text-critical historical analyses of these works, his dissertation focuses on larger issues such as a revaluation of demonology as an analytic paradigm for critical historical research in South Asian religions, inter-sectarian dynamics in the formulation of the Vajrayāna, and practical canonicity and curriculum in tantric Buddhist textual communities. His recently published work is titled "Pakpa’s Verses on Governance in Advice to Prince Jibik Temür: A Jewel Rosary," published in a special issue of Cahiers d’Extrême-Asie on Kingship, Ritual, and Narrative in Tibet and the Surrounding Cultural Area by The French Institute of Asian Studies (École française d’Extrême-Orient). He has received two U.S. State Department research grants through the Fulbright-Nehru Student Research Fellowship program and the Council of American Overseas Research Centers, and is currently a lecturer in Religious Studies at the University of Colorado, Boulder. (Source Accessed June18, 2021)
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