By failing to document popular belief in the supernatural attributes of religious sites and by drawing up conservation management plans that fail to attend to such beliefs, current heritage regimes effectively perform a secular translation of them. I argue that the posthuman turn in the humanities and social sciences, and in particular its openness to forms of agency, vibrancy and vitality in the object world, offers prospects for a kind of heritage practice newly comfortable with the vibrancy that belief in the supernatural lends to the things of popular religion. Focusing on the material heritage of popular religion in Asia—in particular in China and Southeast Asia—attitudes of devotees to the rebuilding of temples and shrines are examine...
China’s dramatic religious revival over the last three decades has defied two dominant theories in t...
This paper presents a phenomenological study of how the Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism preserves...
The proliferation of religious heritage seems to flow self-evidently from the processes of de-church...
By failing to document popular belief in the supernatural attributes of religious sites and by drawi...
The claim that heritage practice in Asia is Eurocentric may be well-founded, but the view that local...
This chapter extends outside the museum to consider how people in East and Southeast Asia relate to ...
An interest in alternative conservation paradigms led me to an examination of the social and histori...
My geographic focus here is Southeast Asia, a region where forced resettlement of people from archae...
The heritagization of religious sites has been increasingly studied in recent decades, with the focu...
The category “heritage” is quickly gaining importance for the study of religion, not least in East A...
This paper argues that Asian religious traditions provide us with resources for alternative ethics a...
Honors (Bachelor's)Asian Languages and CulturesUniversity of Michiganhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/b...
The proliferation of religious heritage seems to flow self-evidently from the processes of de-church...
The article compares the early stages of the revivals of Sāṃkhyayoga and Buddhism in modern India. A...
Heritage formation involves some kind of sacralization, through which cultural forms are lifted up a...
China’s dramatic religious revival over the last three decades has defied two dominant theories in t...
This paper presents a phenomenological study of how the Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism preserves...
The proliferation of religious heritage seems to flow self-evidently from the processes of de-church...
By failing to document popular belief in the supernatural attributes of religious sites and by drawi...
The claim that heritage practice in Asia is Eurocentric may be well-founded, but the view that local...
This chapter extends outside the museum to consider how people in East and Southeast Asia relate to ...
An interest in alternative conservation paradigms led me to an examination of the social and histori...
My geographic focus here is Southeast Asia, a region where forced resettlement of people from archae...
The heritagization of religious sites has been increasingly studied in recent decades, with the focu...
The category “heritage” is quickly gaining importance for the study of religion, not least in East A...
This paper argues that Asian religious traditions provide us with resources for alternative ethics a...
Honors (Bachelor's)Asian Languages and CulturesUniversity of Michiganhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/b...
The proliferation of religious heritage seems to flow self-evidently from the processes of de-church...
The article compares the early stages of the revivals of Sāṃkhyayoga and Buddhism in modern India. A...
Heritage formation involves some kind of sacralization, through which cultural forms are lifted up a...
China’s dramatic religious revival over the last three decades has defied two dominant theories in t...
This paper presents a phenomenological study of how the Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism preserves...
The proliferation of religious heritage seems to flow self-evidently from the processes of de-church...