Recent research on the life of U Dhammaloka and other early western Buddhists in Asia has interesting implications in relation to class, ethnicity and politics. ‘Beachcomber Buddhists’ highlight the wider situation of ‘poor whites’ in Asia—needed by empire but prone to defect from elite standards of behaviour designed to maintain imperial and racial power. ‘Going native’, exemplified by the European bhikkhu, highlights the difficulties faced by empire in policing these racial boundaries and the role of Asian agency in early ‘western’ Buddhism. Finally, such ‘dissident Orientalism’ has political implications, as with specifically Irish forms of solidarity with Asian anti-colonial movements. Within the limits imposed by the data, this...
The aim of this paper is to theorize broadly about how cultural encounters between Asian Buddhists a...
Ireland lies on the margins of the Buddhist world, far from its homeland in northern India and Nepal...
Although Buddhism spread throughout Asia it remained virtually unknown in the West until modern time...
Recent research on the life of U Dhammaloka and other early western Buddhists in Asia has interesti...
The article provides an introduction to the special issue of Contemporary Buddhism entitled ‘U Dhamm...
Globalising “Buddhism” beyond its pre-colonial homelands was a complex practical challenge. Actors s...
This research note explores some methodological challenges arising from biographical research on e...
This paper explores the politics of a remarkable, if minor, conjuncture in world history. In the lat...
The first westerners recorded as becoming lay Buddhists on Asian terms were members of the Buddhist ...
An “Irish Buddhist” was often presented in old newspapers as an oxymoron, but our research (with Al...
Buddhist tradition distinguishes a "central region" where suitable conditions for practice – notably...
The first westerners recorded as becoming lay Buddhists on Asian terms were members of the Buddhist ...
Within Western Buddhism, practitioners are often assumed to be white and middle class. Based in grou...
This article uses a world-systems perspective to analyse the development of Buddhism in Ireland, in ...
This article explores some important aspects of U Dhammaloka's Buddhism, drawing in particular on th...
The aim of this paper is to theorize broadly about how cultural encounters between Asian Buddhists a...
Ireland lies on the margins of the Buddhist world, far from its homeland in northern India and Nepal...
Although Buddhism spread throughout Asia it remained virtually unknown in the West until modern time...
Recent research on the life of U Dhammaloka and other early western Buddhists in Asia has interesti...
The article provides an introduction to the special issue of Contemporary Buddhism entitled ‘U Dhamm...
Globalising “Buddhism” beyond its pre-colonial homelands was a complex practical challenge. Actors s...
This research note explores some methodological challenges arising from biographical research on e...
This paper explores the politics of a remarkable, if minor, conjuncture in world history. In the lat...
The first westerners recorded as becoming lay Buddhists on Asian terms were members of the Buddhist ...
An “Irish Buddhist” was often presented in old newspapers as an oxymoron, but our research (with Al...
Buddhist tradition distinguishes a "central region" where suitable conditions for practice – notably...
The first westerners recorded as becoming lay Buddhists on Asian terms were members of the Buddhist ...
Within Western Buddhism, practitioners are often assumed to be white and middle class. Based in grou...
This article uses a world-systems perspective to analyse the development of Buddhism in Ireland, in ...
This article explores some important aspects of U Dhammaloka's Buddhism, drawing in particular on th...
The aim of this paper is to theorize broadly about how cultural encounters between Asian Buddhists a...
Ireland lies on the margins of the Buddhist world, far from its homeland in northern India and Nepal...
Although Buddhism spread throughout Asia it remained virtually unknown in the West until modern time...