|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Converting American Buddhism: Second-Generation Buddhist Americans, Orientalism, and the Politics of Family Religion |
|
|
|
Author |
Baker, Drew (著)
|
Date | 2020 |
Pages | 394 |
Publisher | Claremont Press |
Publisher Url |
https://www.claremontpress.com/index.html
|
Location | Claremont, CA, US [克萊蒙特, 加利福尼亞州, 美國] |
Series | Claremont Studies in Interreligious Dialogue |
Series No. | 2 |
Content type | 書籍=Book |
Language | 英文=English |
Abstract | This book starts with a mystery. Even though the children of Buddhist American converts likely outnumber their parents, neither Buddhist practitioners nor academics have discussed the experiences of second-generation Buddhists in the United States. Why this absence of ink? Why are second-generation Buddhist Americans invisible?
Drew Baker addresses these questions by reconstructing the cultural history of Buddhist American converts and their children from the 1950s to the present. This study covers a wide range of popular narratives—including Jack Kerouac’s novels, parenting manuals, films like Little Buddha, and essays and autobiographies by second-generation Buddhist Americans.
This cultural history reveals that white Buddhist American converts’ power and visibility has been reinforced by the Orientalist idea of the monk-convert lineage which presents the convert—represented as a free white young adult—as the sole heroic incarnation of the present and future of Buddhism in the modern world. The children of these converts are invisible under this paradigm. By considering their stories, Baker demonstrates that the converts’ children cultivate strategies that invoke the authority of their parents against itself so that they might be recognized as true Buddhist Americans. The children are here to claim their inheritance. |
Table of contents | Contents Acknowledgements ix The Family Album Buried in the Closet 1 Rediscovering a Genealogy from Buddhist American Converts to Second-Generation Buddhist Americans When Two Means One 69 Retracing Scholarly Traditions on Buddhism in the United States The Mountain of Youth 123 Converting American Buddhism and the Authority of the Monk-Convert Paradigm From Master’s Tools to Child’s Toys 209 Remaking the Political as Personal Child’s Mind, Parent’s Mind 289 Nightlight Buddhists, Alternative Linages of Authority, and (Dis)Placing the Buddhist American Canon Conclusion 343 Buddhism in the Made and the Creative Possibilities of Tradition Bibliography 369 Index 391 |
ISBN | 9781946230409 (pbk); 9781946230430 (eb) |
Related reviews | - Book Review: Converting American Buddhism: Second-Generation Buddhist Americans, Orientalism, and the Politics of Family Religion by Drew Baker / Baumann, Martin (評論)
|
Hits | 107 |
Created date | 2023.06.28 |
Modified date | 2023.06.28 |
|
Best viewed with Chrome, Firefox, Safari(Mac) but not supported IE
|
|
|