Acknowledgments
Note on Transliteration and Translation
Map of Tibet
Introduction
1. A Brief History of Vegetarianism in Tibet
2. Meat in the Monastery
3. The Importance of Compassion
4. Tantric Perspectives
5. A Necessary Evil
6. A Positive Good
7. Seeking a Middle Way
Epilogue: Con temporary Tibet
Tibetan Names and Terms
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Geoffrey Barstow is an assistant professor of religious studies at Oregon State University.
A creative and nuanced exploration of an aspect of Tibetan
religiosity that has heretofore remained largely in the dark. An
important and exciting book.
*Andrew Quintman, Yale University*
A very welcome and entirely novel work on the place of
vegetarianism in Tibet, Food of Sinful Demons will make a solid
scholarly contribution to religious studies, Buddhist studies, and
Tibetan studies. Covering a topic of broad interest in fields from
ranging religion to animal rights, it offers something new for
specialists but is also accessible to undergraduates as well as
educated Buddhists trying to understand the role of vegetarianism
and meat eating in Tibetan Buddhism.
*Gray Tuttle, Leila Hadley Luce Associate Professor of Modern
Tibetan Studies, Columbia University*
In this first in-depth study of the history of vegetarianism in
Tibet, Geoffrey Barstow clearly shows that vegetarianism has always
existed in Tibetan culture and was essentially motivated by
compassion for the animals. Food of Sinful Demons is a welcome
contribution to the important debate over the relationships between
and among vegetarianism, health, and religion.
*Matthieu Ricard, author of A Plea for the Animals: The Moral,
Philosophical, and Evolutionary Imperative to Treat All Beings with
Compassion*
Exceptionally relevant in how it explores tensions between
compassionate concern for animal welfare grounded in Buddhist
ethics, perceptions of health, and Tibetan cultural values.
*Reading Religion*
For those following the vegetarian debate as it unfolds on the
Tibetan plateau and as Buddhism spreads to new contexts, Barstow’s
book provides essential reading.
*Tricycle: The Buddhist Review*
Barstow’s work is a foundational contribution to Tibetan studies
that also broadens conversations on Buddhist ethics, animal rights,
and religion and gender.
*Journal of Asian Studies*
Brilliantly researched and beautifully written.
*The Mirror, International Dzogchen Community*
Featuring rigorous scholarship and an engaging, accessible writing
style, Food of Sinful Demons is appropriate for undergraduate and
graduate courses and for scholars across disciplinary boundaries,
including in Buddhist studies, Tibetan and Himalayan studies,
animal studies, anthropology of food, and food studies more
generally.
*Religious Studies Review*
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