Jeffrey W. Cupchik is an ethnomusicologist specializing in Buddhist studies, ritual music, and anthropology of religion. He has spent over twenty years studying Tibetan language, music, culture, and religion in Tibetan communities in India, Nepal, Tibet, Canada, and the United States.
List of Illustrations
Note on Terminology
Note on the Meaning of the Title
Foreword
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Approaching Chod Ritual Studies
Part I: Chod Ritual Practice in Context
1 Ritual Efficacy: Musical Performance in Chod Practice
2. Musical Character of the Chod Genre
Part II: Elements of Chod Practice
3. The Sound of Vultures' Wings: Ritual Mapping the Chod Practice
4 The Chod Damaru Drum: Symbolism, Function, and Variation in an Interpretive Community
5. Mantric Utterance in Chod
6. The Four Ritual Activities
Part III: Meaning and Application of Chod Practice
7. Mind and Sound in Chod
8. Transmission and Transformation
9. Gift of the Body in Chod: Healing the Suffering from "Self-Interest"
Conclusion: Continuity of the Chod Ritual Tradition
Note on Chod Research
Notes
Glossary
Bibliography
Index