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Negotiating Race and Religion in American Buddhism: Burmese Buddhism in California |
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Author |
Cheah, Joseph
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Date | 2004 |
Pages | 227 |
Publisher | Graduate Theological Union |
Publisher Url |
http://gtu.edu/
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Location | Berkeley, CA, US [伯克利, 加利福尼亞州, 美國] |
Content type | 博碩士論文=Thesis and Dissertation |
Language | 英文=English |
Degree | doctor |
Institution | Graduate Theological Union |
Advisor | Osborne, Kenan B. |
Publication year | 2004 |
Keyword | Race; Religion; Buddhism; Burmese Buddhism; California |
Abstract | When the first wave of Burmese immigrant Buddhists set foot on American soil in the late 1960s, they came into contact not only with a variety of forms of Buddhism not found in their native Burma, but also with 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 white Buddhism. Vestiges of the latter can still be seen today, from the development of a de facto two-Buddhisms typology in American Buddhism; from the controversy surrounding who represents "American Buddhism"; and from personal testimony regarding a person's identity as a Buddhist to a smorgasbord approach taken for granted in many centers of white Buddhism. This dissertation contends that race is embedded in these issues not so much in a sense of prejudice or domination as in the sense of racial ideology of white supremacy. White supremacy is used here, in reference not primarily to the more virulent forms of white dominance over non-whites (e.g., slavery), but to a more generic way of describing an hegemonic understanding, on the part of both whites and non-whites, that white Euro-American culture, values, attitudes, beliefs, and practices have become the norm according to which other cultures and social practices are judged. |
Hits | 501 |
Created date | 2005.09.23 |
Modified date | 2016.05.30 |
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