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Race and Religion in American Buddhism: White Supremacy and Immigrant Adaptation
Author Cheah, Joseph (著)
Edition1st Edition
Date2011.10.28
Pages192
PublisherOxford University Press
Publisher Url https://global.oup.com/
LocationOxford, London, UK [牛津, 倫敦, 英國]
SeriesAAR Academy Series
Content type書籍=Book
Language英文=English
NoteJoseph Cheah is Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of Religious Studies and Theology at Saint Joseph College in West Hartford, Connecticut.
Keywordrace; racialization; white supremacy; ideology; immigrant adaptation; white Buddhists; sympathizers
AbstractWhile academic and popular studies of Buddhism have often neglected race as a factor of analysis, the issues concerning race and racialization have remained not far below the surface of the wider discussion among ethnic Buddhists, converts, and sympathizers regarding representations of American Buddhism and adaptations of Buddhist practices to the American context. In Race and Religion in American Buddhism, Joseph Cheah provides a much-needed contribution to the field of religious studies by addressing the under-theorization of race in the study of American Buddhism. Through the lens of racial formation, Cheah demonstrates how adaptations of Buddhist practices by immigrants, converts and sympathizers have taken place within an environment already permeated with the logic and ideology of whiteness and white supremacy. In other words, race and religion (Buddhism) are so intimately bounded together in the United States that the ideology of white supremacy informs the differing ways in which convert Buddhists and sympathizers and Burmese ethnic Buddhists have adapted Buddhist religious practices to an American context.

Cheah offers a complex view of how the Burmese American community must negotiate not only the religious and racial terrains of the United States but also the transnational reach of the Burmese junta. Race and Religion in American Buddhism marks an important contribution to the study of American Buddhism as well as to the larger fields of U.S. religions and Asian American studies.
Table of contentsFront Matter
Copyright Page
Dedication
Acknowledgements

Introduction
1 Colonial Legacy of  White Supremacy in American Buddhism
2 Buddhist Modernism and the American Vipassana Movement
3 Adaptation of  Vipassana Meditation by Convert Buddhists and Sympathizers
4 The Assimilationist Paradigm and Burmese Americans
5 Monastic and Domestic Settings
6 Burmese Loyalty Structure and the Dual Domination Paradigm
Conclusion

End Matter
137Appendix Interview Instrument
Endnotes
Further Reading
Index
ISBN0199756287 (Hardcover); 9780199756285 (Hardcover); 9780199918874 (Online)
Related reviews
  1. Book Review: Race and Religion in American Buddhism: White Supremacy and Immigrant Adaptation by Joseph Cheah / Miller Skriletz, Claire (評論)
  2. Book Review: Race and Religion in American Buddhism: White Supremacy and Immigrant Adaptation by Joseph Cheah / Suh, Sharon A. (評論)
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Created date2023.09.21
Modified date2023.09.21



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