Discourse, Authority, Demand: The Politics of Early English Publications on Buddhism

A defining feature of Buddhism in its modern Asian and Western transformations—indeed, its very name—is the centrality of the Buddha Sakyamuni and the assumption that he was the founder of the religion. Many of the key features of transnational, translated modern Buddhisms depend on it. It is the pr...

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description A defining feature of Buddhism in its modern Asian and Western transformations—indeed, its very name—is the centrality of the Buddha Sakyamuni and the assumption that he was the founder of the religion. Many of the key features of transnational, translated modern Buddhisms depend on it. It is the premise that enabled the nineteenth-century definition of “real” Buddhism as a rational, humanist philosophy. It justified the dismissal by early scholars of traditional ritual practices and the trappings of institutional religion, the stripping away of two thousand years of “cultural accretions” and “priestcraft,” to create Buddhism as a universal teaching
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subjects Behavioral sciences
Buddhism
Buddhist philosophy
Christian ethics
Christian missionaries
Christian philosophy
Christianity
Communications
Communications media
Digital media
Digital publications
Humanism
International law
Law
Missionaries
Personality
Personality psychology
Personality theories
Practical theology
Psychology
Religion
Religious practices
Religious rituals
Social sciences
Spiritual belief systems
Spiritual leaders
Theology
Treaties
title Discourse, Authority, Demand: The Politics of Early English Publications on Buddhism
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