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Buddhist “Solutions” and Action in the Context of COVID-19, East and West: Complexity, Paradoxes, and Ambivalences |
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Author |
Obadia, Lionel (著)
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Source |
Contemporary Buddhism: An Interdisciplinary Journal
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Volume | v.21 n.1-2 |
Date | 2020 |
Pages | 170 - 189 |
Publisher | Routledge |
Publisher Url |
https://www.routledge.com/
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Location | Abingdon, UK [阿賓登, 英國] |
Content type | 期刊論文=Journal Article |
Language | 英文=English |
Note | Lionel Obadia, Ph-D in Sociology (1997) has been associate professor in Ethnology (1998-2004) and is full professor in Anthropology (since 2004) at the University of Lyon, France, and in other French universities (EHESS, EPHE, SciencePo). He has headed the department of Social Sciences and Humanities at the French Agency for Research (ANR) from 2017 to 2021. He is specialized in anthropology of religion, Asian religions and Globalization. He has conducted fieldworks in France, Europe (on Buddhism in the West), Nepal (on Buddhism and Shamanism) and South India. He has published ten books and more than 170 papers (journal articles and book chapters). |
Keyword | COVID-19; meditation; lockdown; adaptations |
Abstract | This paper aims to understand the complex and ambivalent relationships that globalized Buddhism between Asia and the West has with the COVID-19 pandemic, both in terms of Buddhism’s adaptation of practices to the pandemic and its representational position in society. Buddhism is not the most renowned religion in the media for its interpretation of the causes of the pandemic, nor is it the one that has epitomized the most original adaptations, particularly digital ones, of religions in a context of restricted sociability. Above all, it offers introspective resources that can help to psychologically resist the lockdown and the restriction of sociability imposed by governments, thus psychologically palliating a normative and brutal inflection of social habits. Based on an analysis of information published in analogical and electronic media, as well as personal knowledge of the empirical expressions and scriptural forms of Buddhism, this article intends to show that, far from being limited to this single contribution, Buddhism has an ambivalent relationship to the COVID-19 pandemic, much like other religions. |
ISSN | 14639947 (P); 14767953 (E) |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1080/14639947.2022.2029212 |
Hits | 130 |
Created date | 2022.12.09 |
Modified date | 2022.12.09 |

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