The Vessantara Jataka tells the story of Prince Vessantara, who attained
the Perfection of Generosity by giving away his fortune, his children,
and his wife. Vessantara was the penultimate rebirth as a human of the
future Gotama Buddha, and his extreme charity has been represented and
reinterpreted in texts, sermons, rituals, and art throughout South and
Southeast Asia and beyond. This anthology features well-respected
anthropologists, textual scholars in religious and Buddhist studies, and
art historians, who engage in sophisticated readings of the text and its
ethics of giving, understanding of attachment and nonattachment,
depiction of the trickster, and unique performative qualities. They
reveal the story to be as brilliantly layered as a Homeric epic or
Shakespearean play, with aspects of tragedy, comedy, melodrama, and
utopian fantasy intertwined to problematize and scrutinize Theravada
Buddhism's cherished virtues.