วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 8 กันยายน พ.ศ. 2559

What images come to mind when you hear the word Buddhism?



     What images come to mind when you hear the word Buddhism? For many, they are images popularized by Hollywood as a mystical world, quaint and rustic; a temple of photogenically peeling paint, romantically overgrown courtyard, and a picaresque Buddha image suitably ancient and ornate. If we add a saffron-robed monk with an inscrutable expression who speaks in riddles and proverbs, then the picture is nearly perfect. Lights, camera, action! Into this scene enters a protagonist who is obsessed with wealth or status but whose soul, despite himself, longs for something “more”; and by seeing the simplicity of the monk’s life, a life of no wealth, property, or even modern appliances, the protagonist learns about the important things in life. Does this all sound familiar and even cliché? That’s because it is.

This course of story-telling uses the literary trope of the “noble savage,” which has existed for hundreds of years. In the 14th through 19th century, as the Europeans were colonizing the Americas and Africa, the noble savage often took the form of Native Americans and Africans because writers, for various reasons, wanted to portray outsiders who were un-corrupted by modern European society. They often lived communally and shared their resources, unlike the selfish and competitive “modern” man. And they possessed a wisdom which transcended school-bound education. In contemporary books and movies, we can see the noble savage trope in works such as Brave New World by Aldous Huxley to Eat, Pray, Love starring Julia Roberts. But as it became less fashionable to portray ethnic or racial groups in this way, the new figure in this trope is the Buddhist monk.