Indigenizing or Adapting? Importing Buddhism into a Settler-colonial Society
In this paper I problematize the phrase "indigenization of Buddhism" (Spuler 2003, cf. Baumann 1997) through an investigation of a Buddhist project in a settler-colonial society. An international organization called the Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition (FPMT) is co...
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University of Lucerne
2015-02-01
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doaj-6283703316ae49b3a2304f3ce03e584c2020-11-25T00:31:09ZengUniversity of LucerneJournal of Global Buddhism1527-64572015-02-018013215679Indigenizing or Adapting? Importing Buddhism into a Settler-colonial SocietySally McAra0The University of AucklandIn this paper I problematize the phrase "indigenization of Buddhism" (Spuler 2003, cf. Baumann 1997) through an investigation of a Buddhist project in a settler-colonial society. An international organization called the Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition (FPMT) is constructing a forty-five-meter high stupa in rural Australia with the intention "to provide a refuge of peace and serenity for all." In 2003, a woman of Aboriginal descent met with the stupa developers to express her concern about the project. While her complaint does not represent local Aboriginal views about the stupa (other Aboriginal groups expressed support for it), it illustrates how in settler-colonial societies, Buddhist cultural imports that mark the land can have unexpected implications for indigenous people. This paper offers a glimpse of the multi-layered power relations that form the often invisible backdrop to the establishment of Buddhism in settler-colonial societies and suggests that we need to find terms other than "indigenization" when analyzing this.http://www.globalbuddhism.org/jgb/index.php/jgb/article/view/78 |
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DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Sally McAra |
spellingShingle |
Sally McAra Indigenizing or Adapting? Importing Buddhism into a Settler-colonial Society Journal of Global Buddhism |
author_facet |
Sally McAra |
author_sort |
Sally McAra |
title |
Indigenizing or Adapting? Importing Buddhism into a Settler-colonial Society |
title_short |
Indigenizing or Adapting? Importing Buddhism into a Settler-colonial Society |
title_full |
Indigenizing or Adapting? Importing Buddhism into a Settler-colonial Society |
title_fullStr |
Indigenizing or Adapting? Importing Buddhism into a Settler-colonial Society |
title_full_unstemmed |
Indigenizing or Adapting? Importing Buddhism into a Settler-colonial Society |
title_sort |
indigenizing or adapting? importing buddhism into a settler-colonial society |
publisher |
University of Lucerne |
series |
Journal of Global Buddhism |
issn |
1527-6457 |
publishDate |
2015-02-01 |
description |
In this paper I problematize the phrase "indigenization of Buddhism" (Spuler 2003, cf. Baumann 1997) through an investigation of a Buddhist project in a settler-colonial society. An international organization called the Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition (FPMT) is constructing a forty-five-meter high stupa in rural Australia with the intention "to provide a refuge of peace and serenity for all." In 2003, a woman of Aboriginal descent met with the stupa developers to express her concern about the project. While her complaint does not represent local Aboriginal views about the stupa (other Aboriginal groups expressed support for it), it illustrates how in settler-colonial societies, Buddhist cultural imports that mark the land can have unexpected implications for indigenous people. This paper offers a glimpse of the multi-layered power relations that form the often invisible backdrop to the establishment of Buddhism in settler-colonial societies and suggests that we need to find terms other than "indigenization" when analyzing this. |
url |
http://www.globalbuddhism.org/jgb/index.php/jgb/article/view/78 |
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AT sallymcara indigenizingoradaptingimportingbuddhismintoasettlercolonialsociety |
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