Industry Reviews
"Sa-pan played a central part in the transfer of Buddhist culture to Tibet. Gold's book provides a valuable window into how this great scholar understood the enterprise of cultural translation in which he was engaged. It should be of interest not only to Tibetanists, but to many concerned with similar processes of cultural translation and adaptation in other contexts." - Religions of South Asia "Gold has taken us a step forward in the exploration of the Tibetan intellectual history, and particularly of Sakyapa learning." - Journal of the American Oriental Society "This book is a study of the Gateway to Learning ... The writing throughout is elegant and entertaining. The book is naturally of specialist interest, but it also deals with larger issues surrounding translation, religious authority and language. The way these have been approached will appeal to everyone interested in the history of religion and Indian literature." - Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society "To its credit, this book poses a host of questions to the fields of translation studies, theoretical linguistics, and hermeneutics in addition to Indian and Tibetan Buddhist intellectual history." - Journal of the American Academy of Religion "The Dharma's Gatekeepers strikes an impressive balance. Gold details the very specific concerns of a thirteenth-century Tibetan Buddhist scholar driven to maintain traditions adopted from ancient India. In the process, he casts light on currently debated issues in translation, aesthetics, hermeneutics, and authority." - H-Net Reviews "The Gateway is not an easy text to understand. Happily ... Gold has risen to the challenge. His translations are accurate and readable, and his penetrating analysis of the text elegantly connects Sakya Pandita's claims to issues in translation studies, the epistemology of testimony, linguistics and linguistic anthropology, hermeneutics, rhetoric, poetics, education, and the study of the aesthetic dimensions of political power in India and Tibet ... a very fine book and one that deserves a wide readership." - International Journal of Hindu Studies "Although parts of this important text have been previously translated and examined, Gold's analysis of what he calls Sakya Pandita's 'neoconservatism' is a fresh contribution, offering a fine examination of the ideals, methods, and anxieties of the Tibetan scholastic community." - Buddhadharma "This is a fascinating study of a major work in Tibetan intellectual history. Written with nuance and grace, it is poised to make a major contribution to the study of some of the key conceptual and ethical foundations of Tibetan Buddhist scholasticism and its relation to the intellectual traditions of India. In wider terms, it contributes to important discussions in the humanities." - Janet Gyatso, coeditor of Women in Tibet