Jim Rheingans (University of Vienna): Tulkus, Titles, Disagreements — Succession by Reincarnation in Tibetan Societies
30 November 2023
Leonard Wolfson Auditorium
Abstract
The Tibetan conception of consciously reborn bodhisattvas as so-called tulkus in a successive line of recognised incarnations seems unique within Buddhist cultures. Even more remarkable is how such tulku positions became institutionalised and lasted over centuries, sometimes with considerable religious and political influence – thus also becoming prone to manipulation and disagreement. While some initial research about the origins, benefits, and problems of such a system has been undertaken, its manifold dimensions and numerous textual sources still await further investigation.
After introducing the tulku as a form of succession with religious, legal, and social implications, this lecture discusses some salient case studies from the 13th to 16th centuries, the period in which the Tibetan tulku system emerged and became established institutionally. Some of the questions addressed are: Why has this system become so prevalent in the Tibetan cultural sphere? What sources and methods are available for its study? What are its many dimensions (such as spiritual, political, cultural)? Is it possible to identify common “regulations” or practices across Tibet’s religious traditions? The lecture concludes by asking how research into the different dimensions of the tulku system can help us move towards a more differentiated understanding of religion in the Tibetan cultural sphere and beyond.
About the speaker
Jim Rheingans is Professor of Tibetology at the University of Vienna. He studied at the Universities of Heidelberg and Hamburg and completed his doctorate in 2008 at Bristol/Bath Spa. After postdoctoral research in Hamburg, he taught at the Universities of Bonn and Copenhagen. From 2017 to 2023, as Senior Lecturer for Tibetan Buddhism, he developed the Tibetan Studies programme at the University of Sydney (since 2022 as Khyentse-Macready Senior Lecturer). His research concerns the religious history of the Tibetan plateau with a focus on Buddhist meditative traditions and Tibetan literary genres; he is also interested in interdisciplinary collaborations and translation. Recent publications include the monographs The Eighth Karmapa’s Life and His Interpretation of the Great Seal (2017) and The Life and Works of Karma ’phrin las pa