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Daniel Odier

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Daniel Odier
Born
Daniel Robert Odier

(1945-05-17)17 May 1945 (age 79)
Geneva, Switzerland
Other namesDelacorta
Occupations
  • Author
  • screenwriter
  • poet
  • essayist
Notable workDiva
Luna
The Job: Interviews with William S. Burroughs
SpouseNell Gotkovsky (died 1998)

Daniel Robert Odier (born 17 May 1945) is a Swiss author, screenwriter, Zen master, Chan master, and specialist inKashmir Shaivism. Praised byAnaïs Nin as "an outstanding writer and a dazzling poet," he is also a spiritual teacher of Eastern religious traditions, especiallyTantra.[1]

Biography

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Daniel Odier began studies at the school of Beaux Arts in Rome but later chose to focus on writing rather than painting.[2][3] He received his university degree in Paris and was employed by a leading Swiss newspaper as a music critic. He has taught screenwriting at theUniversity of Tulsa in Oklahoma.

Fascinated by Chan (the Chinese origin ofzen), Daniel Odier decided to study the proximity of Chan and Tantra, inspired by the work of the Chinese hermit Chien Ming Chen, whom he met in Kalimpong in 1968. Also in 1968, Daniel Odier became a disciple of Kalu Rinpoche for seven years; he received transmission of theMahamudra from his master.

In 1975, he met a Kashmiri Shivaïte yogini called Lalitâ Devî in a Himalayan hermitage, a decisive meeting which he recounts in his various works on Tantra. He received the transmission of Mahamudra and of the mystical teachings of the Pratyabhijñā and Spanda schools of the Kaula tradition from Lalitâ Devî. He then specialized in Kashmiri Shaivism, which he taught in several countries (France, Italy, Germany, Belgium, United States ...).

In 1995, Daniel Odier founded the "Tantra/Chan centre" in Paris, which he dissolved in 2000 in order to encourage independent spiritual practice. He has taught courses on Eastern spiritual traditions at theUniversity of California.[3][4]

In 2004, he received dharma transmission from Jing Hui, abbot ofBailin Monastery and dharma successor ofHsu Yun,[5][6] using the name "Ming Qing".[note 1]

Daniel Odier is most of all a teacher ofKashmir Shaivism; he relates in his bookTantric Quest his mystical initiation from a tantricdakini, Lalita Devi, in Kashmir.[4]

He was married to the violinist Nell Gotkovsky (died 1998).[1]

Works

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Apart from his works on Tantra, Odier is best known for a series of six novels published under the pseudonym 'Delacorta.' The books center around Serge Gorodish, a classically trained pianist with depressive tendencies, and his underageprotégée named Alba. The two enjoy an intense romantic relationship (never actually consummated), and embark together upon various confidence schemes and other intrigues. These often result in the death or discomfiture of less sympathetic characters, although Alba and Gorodish themselves appear to be motivated more by their own profit and amusement than by any moral considerations. The series includes the novelDiva which was later used as the basis for apopular French film of the same name. Odier has also used the Delacorta pseudonym for several unrelated books (mostly detective novels or thrillers) and as a screenwriter. The Alba/Gorodish books have appeared in omnibus editions in French and have been published in numerous other languages. Most of Odier's other fiction remains untranslated.

In addition toDiva, film adaptations of Odier's books includeLight Years Away (from the novel,La voie sauvage) and a French television film based on the Delacorta novelRock (Lola). Odier's own screenwriting credits include the filmsInvitation au voyage (1982) andCelestial Clockwork (1995).[8]

Bibliography

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Fiction, poetry and criticism

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  • Transparences (poetry, 1964)
  • Le soleil dans la poche (poetry, 1965)
  • Rouge (1967)
  • Entretiens avec William Burroughs (1969; English trans.The Job: Interviews with William S. Burroughs, 1969)
  • Nuit contre nuit (poetry, 1972)
  • Le voyage de John O'Flaherty (novel, 1972; republished 1997 asL'illusionniste)
  • Éclats d'ombre (1972)
  • La voie sauvage (novel, 1974)
  • Ming (novel, 1976)
  • Splendor solis (1976)
  • L'année du lièvre (novel, 1978)
  • Le milieu du monde: une fabuleuse traversée de l'histoire Suisse (novel, 1979)
  • Petit déjeuner sur un tapis rouge (novel, 1982)
  • Gioconda (novel, 1984)
  • Cécilia (opera libretto, 1985)
  • Le baiser cannibale (novel, 1987; English trans.Cannibal Kiss, 1989)
  • Le clavecin (novel, 1992)
  • Les sept secondes de l'arc-en-ciel (novel, 2006)

Pseudonymous works (as 'Delacorta')

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  • Nana (1979; Eng. trans. 1984)
  • Diva (1979; Eng. trans. 1983)
  • Luna (1979; Eng. trans. 1984)
  • Rock (1981; some editions titledLola; Eng. trans.:Lola, 1984)
  • Papillons de nuit (1984)
  • Vida (1985; Eng. trans. 1985)
  • Alba (1985; Eng. trans. 1989)
  • Somnambule (essays on photographs by Stanley Greene, 1990)
  • Rap à Babylone Beach (1992; Eng. trans.The Rap Factor, 1993)
  • Imago (1996)

Works on Tantra and Eastern Mysticism

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  • Sculptures tantriques du Népal (1970)
  • Nirvana Tao: techniques de méditation (1974; Eng. trans.Nirvana Tao: The Secret Meditation Techniques of the Taoist and Buddhist Masters, 1986; republished asMeditation Techniques of the Buddhist and Taoist Masters, 2003)
  • Népal (1976)
  • (with Marc de Smedt)Essais sur les mystiques orientales (1984)
  • Tantra: l'initiation d'un occidental à l'amour absolu (1996; Eng. trans.Tantric Quest: An Encounter with Absolute Love, 1997)
  • Désirs, passions et spiritualité: l'unité de l'être (1999; Eng. trans.Desire: The Tantric Path to Awakening, 2001)
  • Lalla. Chants mystiques du tantrisme cachemirien (translation from English, 2000)
  • Tantra: spontanéité de l'extase (2000)
  • L'incendie du coeur: le chant tantrique du frémissement (2004; Eng. trans.Yoga Spandakarika: The Sacred Texts at the Origins of Tantra, 2005)
  • Tantra yoga: le Vijñânabhaïrava Tantra, le 'tantra de la connaissance suprême' (2004)
  • Le grand sommeil des éveillés: interromptu par l'exposition de Mahchinachara, La Grande Voie Chinoise, Coeur du Tantra et du Chan (2005)
  • Chan & Zen: le jardin des iconoclastes (2009)
  • Tantra: la dimension sacrée de l'érotisme (2013)
  • Les portes de la joie: être vraiment zen (6th Feb 2014; Eng. trans.The Doors of Joy: 19 Meditations for Authentic Living, 2014)

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^The name "Ming Qi" is being used by Lily-Marie Johnson[7]

References

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  1. ^abDelacorta (1984).Nana. Summit Books. p. 127.
  2. ^French Wikipedia entry: Daniel Odier
  3. ^abDelacorta at Biogs.com
  4. ^abDaniel Odier's Official Webpage: Biography in English
  5. ^Biography (at bottom of the page)
  6. ^"zhaozhou-chan,BIOGRAPHY OF DANIEL ODIER". Archived fromthe original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved2013-03-27.
  7. ^The Dharma Lineage of my Master: Grand Master JING Hui, Abbot of Bai-lin (Cypress Forest)
  8. ^Daniel Odier at IMDb.com

External links

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