Race and Religion in American Buddhism
White Supremacy and Immigrant Adaptation
Series: AAR Academy Series;
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP USA
- Date of Publication 17 November 2011
- ISBN 9780199756285
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages192 pages
- Size 160x236x22 mm
- Weight 431 g
- Language English 0
Categories
Short description:
In Race and Religion in American Buddhism, Joseph Cheah examines how the racial ideology of white supremacy has been played out in the two different ways by which convert Buddhists and sympathizers, and Burmese ethnic Buddhists have adapted Buddhist religious practices to the American context.
MoreLong description:
When the first wave of Burmese immigrant Buddhists set foot on American soil in the late 1960s, they came into contact with a variety of forms of Buddhism not found in their native Burma. One of these forms was a white or convert Buddhism, whose legacy includes the specter of an Orientalist and racist past, often hardly acknowledged, yet rarely if ever entirely absent from the discourse within Euro-American Buddhism. The legacy of Orientalism in convert Buddhism can be traced to the works of Western Orientalists in the middle and late Victorian era. Stemming in part from Orientalist racial projects, vestiges of white supremacy ideology can still be detected today in the controversy surrounding who represents "American Buddhism" and the smorgasbord of approaches in Buddhist practices that are taken for granted in many meditation centers, hospitals, and other institutions. The prevailing ideology of white supremacy operative in these and other contexts influences the ways in which Buddhist practices have been adapted by both convert and ethnic Buddhist communities. Within the scope of Buddhism as both a religion and a practice, focusing primarily on the Theravada tradition, Joseph Cheah examines in Race and Religion in American Buddhism rearticulations of Asian Buddhist practices through the lens of race and racialization.
Race and Religion in American Buddhism is an excellent contribution to the fields of religious studies, Asian American Studies, ethnic studies, immigrant religions, and studies of American Buddhism that lays bare the white supremacist assumptions of privilege in the defition of what makes a real Buddhist... Such a book-length study as this stands to transform the discourse on American Buddhism and Asian American religions in significant and much needed ways.
Table of Contents:
Chapter One: Introduction
Chapter Two: Colonial Legacy of White Supremacy in American Buddhism
Chapter Three: Buddhist Modernism and the American Vipassana Movement
Chapter Four: Adaptation of Vipassana Meditation by Convert Buddhists and Sympathizers
Chapter Five: Assimilationist Paradigm and Burmese Americans
Chapter Six: Monastic and Domestic Settings
Chapter Seven: Burmese Loyalty Structure of the Dual Domination Paradigm
Chapter Eight: Conclusion
Bibliography
Index