the study of chinese buddhism in the u.s. lewis lancaster taiwan april, 2015
TRANSCRIPT
- Slide 1
- The Study of Chinese Buddhism in the U.S. Lewis Lancaster Taiwan April, 2015
- Slide 2
- Sectarian/Schools Pure Land Chan
- Slide 3
- John McCrea Chan Oxhead School Loose fellowship Mostly known through Dunhuang manuscripts Deceased
- Slide 4
- Robert Sharf Pure Land is a bibliographical category rather than an institution Reinterpreting study of Chinese Buddhism University of California, Berkeley
- Slide 5
- Charles Orzech Cosmology and Tantra in political power. Denial of the position that Tantra is the last decaying phase of Indian Buddhism Bristol University, U.K.
- Slide 6
- A. Welter Chan and politics University of Arizona
- Slide 7
- Monasteries Vinaya
- Slide 8
- Gareth Fisher Anthropologist studying the new monastic construction projects in the PRC Syracuse University
- Slide 9
- Mazio Poceski Hongzhou School Monastic codes in Medieval China University of Florida
- Slide 10
- Susan Naquin Buddhist temples of Beijing during the Ming and Qing dynasties. Princeton University
- Slide 11
- Dynasties
- Slide 12
- Peter Gregory Sung was more the Golden Age of Buddhism than the Tang Smith College
- Slide 13
- Marsha Weidner Buddhist decline after the Tang is incorrect. Interdisciplinary culture based studies offer a different picture. University of Kansas
- Slide 14
- Chi-chiang Huang Sung dynasty Buddhist history and the relationship to the royal court Hobart-Smith Colleges
- Slide 15
- Morton Schlutter Platform Sutra Sung dynasty politics and Buddhism University of Iowa
- Slide 16
- Darui Long Northern Ming Edition of the Chinese Buddhist Canon University of the West
- Slide 17
- Canon/Textual Catalogues
- Slide 18
- Jiang Wu When did the first set of the Chinese Buddhist canon arrive in Europe? University of Arizona
- Slide 19
- Tanya Storch Study of catalogs and Chinese bibliographical sources How accurate are the ancient catalogs? Buddhist universities in the U.S. University of the Pacific
- Slide 20
- Jan Nattier Early translations of Chinese texts University of Indiana (retired)
- Slide 21
- Robert Buswell/ Donald Lopez Reference work Chinese Buddhist texts and apocrypha UCLA/University of Michigan
- Slide 22
- Contemporary PRC Taiwan
- Slide 23
- 20 th century Reform
- Slide 24
- Holmes Welch If Taixu had succeeded would Buddhism have been Buddhism? Deceased
- Slide 25
- Charles Jones Buddhism in Taiwan 1660-1990 Catholic University of America
- Slide 26
- Don Pittman Taixus reforms of Buddhism after the Taiping Rebellion. Phillips Theological Seminary
- Slide 27
- Daoism
- Slide 28
- Josh Capitanio Buddhist Taoist interface University of the West
- Slide 29
- Meditation
- Slide 30
- Livia Kohn Comparison of Chan and Daoist practices of meditation Boston University
- Slide 31
- Eric Greene Chinese meditation from 400-600 C.E. was related to the rituals of repentance. University of California, Berkeley
- Slide 32
- Art
- Slide 33
- Stan Abe Buddhism and Modern Aestheticism Chinese Buddhist Sculpture Duke University
- Slide 34
- T Griffith Foulk Critical of Art History that divorces art from original cultural contexts Maintains too much reliance on Sutras and on the physical appearance of images Sarah Lawrence College
- Slide 35
- Daniel Stevenson Meaning of an image is not fixed but open to interpretation Buddhist rituals of the Tiantai and Pure Land. University of Kansas
- Slide 36
- Body Cremation Immolation
- Slide 37
- Raoul Birnbaum Healing Buddha and art associated with him Contemporary Buddhism in PRC University of California, Santa Cruz
- Slide 38
- James A. Benn Study of self- immolation the role of the body in Chinese Buddhist rituals and events Mc Master University
- Slide 39
- Marcus Bingenheimer Formerly with CBETA Study of the life of Yinshun Relics of the Whole Body show that Buddhism introduced the idea of mummification to China Temple University
- Slide 40
- John Kieschnick Material Culture Blood Writing of Buddhist texts Stanford University
- Slide 41
- Ritual
- Slide 42
- Stephen Teiser Buddhism and Chinese practices regarding reincarnation, hells, Ghost Festival Princeton University
- Slide 43
- Buddhist Theology
- Slide 44
- William Chu Buddhist theology and meditation University of the West
- Slide 45
- Roger Jackson/John Makransky Buddhist Theology
- Slide 46
- Robert Gimello Buddhist thought in China, including Tantra Catholic theological perspectives on Buddhism Notre Dame University
- Slide 47
- Gender
- Slide 48
- Marian Levering Gender in the Chan tradition Women in Chinese Buddhism University of Tennessee