New Publication by THI Faculty: Living Treasure, edited by Holly Gayley and Andrew Quintman
鈥淲hen wonder adorns wonder, Tibetan nomads sing: 鈥榃ere I to heighten a high thing with something high,/ With clouds I would heighten the collar of the blue sky.鈥 Here is a heaped cloud offering of essays by distinguished scholars in honor of Janet Gyatso. Plumbing the extraordinary depths of Tibetan language, she has been revealing the riches and wisdom of Tibetan civilization in all its myriad complexities over a lifetime.鈥鈥擫ama Jabb, author of Oral and Literary Continuities in Modern Tibetan Literature: The Inescapable Nation
鈥淛anet Gyatso truly is a living treasure. She is an inspiration for scholarly excellence in the fascinating dimensions represented in this book鈥攕tudies in Tibetan literature, the Nyingma tradition, gender and sexuality in Buddhism, early modernity, the more-than-human world, and so much more. But beyond this, she is an example of how to live a life dedicated to intellectual precision, far-ranging curiosity, and wholehearted mentorship.鈥鈥擲arah H. Jacoby, author of Love and Liberation: Autobiographical Writings of the Tibetan Buddhist Visionary Sera Khandro
鈥淭hrough the works she has written, the courses she has taught, and the scholars she has mentored, Janet Gyatso has transformed the field of Tibetan Buddhist studies, as the essays in this volume so eloquently attest.鈥鈥擠onald S. Lopez Jr., Arthur E. Link Distinguished University Professor of Buddhist and Tibetan Studies, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor