Obituary for Lucy Bulliet
Michael Brattus Jones
m.b.jones at MAIL.UTEXAS.EDU
Sun Jun 26 06:56:28 UTC 2011
Thank you, Professor Lubin, for your touching, eloquent, and much
needed words, which I now forward to her family in case has not
already been done. Beyond her
dissertation (Harvard 1983) which you mentioned, we owe to her
translations of portions of several Vedic hymns in Sources of Indian
Tradition (2nd Ed. Vol. 1 by A.T. Embree, S.N. Hay, and W.T. De Bary,
1988): RV 9.62, 108 (pg. 15-16) and AV 4.17; 6.56 (pg. 22-24). I
believe there were conference papers as well. For me, she was a
patient mentor, harsh critic, deep inspiration, and dear friend, who
is sorely missed.
-M. B. Jones
From: "Lubin, Tim" <lubint at WLU.EDU>
To: INDOLOGY at liverpool.ac.uk
Sent: Saturday, June 25, 2011 10:19 PM
Subject: Re: [INDOLOGY] Obituary for Lucy Bulliet
I hope you'll all indulge me a reply in a personal vein to Joanna's
question about a dear friend now passed.
Lucy Bulliet was an eminently thoughtful and humane soul. Her
appreciation of .Rgvedic poetry was matched (or perhaps exceeded) only
by her love of golden-age recordings of jazz. Self-effacing to a
fault and devoted to her family, she did not publish much after
completing her dissertation on the V.rtra myth in the .Rgveda under
Ingalls. But her erudition bore fruit rather in her friendship and
mentoring of a generation of students and young colleagues at Columbia.
Lucy certainly filled a crucial gap during my doctoral studies at
Columbia when my interests led me toward the Veda. She was always the
only Vedic specialist around the university, and especially after
Barbara Miller died and Brian Smith decamped for the West Coast, she
was a great help and conversation partner in my Sanskrit studies
during my time there.
Over the last two decades, she made several trips to India, especially
Kolkata, to read with a scholar, and it was a great pleasure to meet
up with her near the New Woodlands in Chennai. She was always eager
to discuss a difficult passage, and she brought to these discussions
-- and to life in general -- patience, reflection, and a wry, often
sardonic humor. Those fortunate enough to know her are missing her
singular voice.
Tim Lubin
Washington and Lee University
-----Original Message-----
From: Indology [mailto:INDOLOGY at liverpool.ac.uk] On Behalf Of Michael
Brattus Jones
Sent: Saturday, June 25, 2011 6:52 PM
To: INDOLOGY at liverpool.ac.uk
Subject: Re: [INDOLOGY] Obituary for Lucy Bulliet
Dear Professor Kirkpatrick (and list members),
I'm not sure if you are referring to the (planned) bibliography of
Lucy's library of indological volumes, a list of her publications, or
something else I am not aware of that she compiled as a bibliography.
Although neither of the first two are planned for publication per se,
either or both may certainly be shared (upon completion) individually
with members of the list by contacting me (mbjones at utexas.edu).
Further, a posthumous volume of an intended work of hers, an
(undergrad level) introduction to Vedic Religion, may eventually be
forthcoming, though at this point her progress has not been ascertained.
Thank you,
Michael Brattus Jones
Ph.D. student, Department of Asian Studies
University of Texas at Austin
Email: mbjones at utexas.edu
From: Indology [INDOLOGY at liverpool.ac.uk] On Behalf Of JKirkpatrick
[jkirk at SPRO.NET]
Sent: Saturday, June 25, 2011 9:32 AM
To: INDOLOGY at liverpool.ac.uk
Subject: Re: [INDOLOGY] Obituary for Lucy Bulliet
May I ask, will her valuable Bibliography be published in another
obituary?
Or is there one somewhere on Columbia's website?
Thanks,
Joanna Kirkpatrick
-----Original Message-----
From: Indology [mailto:INDOLOGY at liverpool.ac.uk] On Behalf Of
Michael Brattus Jones
Sent: Friday, June 24, 2011 7:38 PM
To: INDOLOGY at liverpool.ac.uk
Subject: [INDOLOGY] Obituary for Lucy Bulliet
It is with great sadness that I pass along this obituary for Lucy
Bulliet, which was written by her husband Professor Richard
Bulliet of Columbia University.
- M. B. Jones
OBITUARY:
Dr. Lucianne Cherry Bulliet, who had taught Vedic Religion at
Columbia University for almost twenty years, succumbed to cancer
on March 2, 2011. She was 71 years old. Dr. Bulliet grew up in
San Diego, California, and graduated from Point Loma High School
and Pomona College. She earned her doctoral degree in Sanskrit
and Indian
Studies at Harvard University under Professor Daniel H. H.
Ingalls.
Her scholarly interests focused on the earliest phases of Indian
religion and culture as manifested in ancient works written in
the Vedic language, and on the roots of Indo-European culture in
Central Asia. She is survived by her husband Richard and son
Mark.
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