Tibetan and Zen Buddhism in Britain : transplantaition, development and adaptation
著者
書誌事項
Tibetan and Zen Buddhism in Britain : transplantaition, development and adaptation
(Critical studies in Buddhism)
RoutledgeCurzon, 2004
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. 242-249) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
This book analyses the transplantation, development and adaptation of the two largest Tibetan and Zen Buddhist organizations currently active on the British religious landscape: the New Kadampa Tradition (NKT) and the Order of Buddhist Contemplatives (OBC). The key contributions of recent scholarship are evaluated and organised thematically to provide a framework for analysis, and the history and current landscape of contemporary Tibetan and Zen Buddhist practice in Britain are also mapped out. A number of patterns and processes identified elsewhere are exemplified, although certain assumptions made about the nature of 'British Buddhism' are subjected to critical scrutiny and challenged.
目次
- Preface Acknowledgements Abbreviations List of Illustrations PART ONE: REVIEW AND CONTEXTUALISATION 1. Buddhism in Britain: Review and Contextualisation: Introduction
- Buddhism and British Culture
- The Impact of Buddhism on British Culture
- The Appeal of Buddhism
- The Impact of British Culture on Buddhism
- The Transplantation Process
- Material Conditions
- Trans-Cultural Processes
- The Nature of the Incoming Tradition
- Policies and Patterns of Adaptation
- Policies and Patterns
- The Question of Authenticity
- Contextualising the NKT and OBC
- The British Buddhist Context
- Tibetan Buddhism in Britain
- Zen Buddhism in Britain PART TWO: THE NEW KADAMPA TRADITION 2. The New Kadampa Tradition: Background and Cross-Cultural Context: Introduction: Contextualising the NKT
- Divisions within the Gelug Tradition
- The Dorje Shugden Controversy 3. The Emergence of the NKT in Britain: Introduction
- Gelug Buddhism in the West: The FPMT
- Geshe Kelsang Gyatso
- Problems at the Priory
- Geshe Kelsang`s Network Takes Shape
- Dorje Shugden Reliance in Geshe Kelsang`s Centres
- The Crystalisation of the New Kadampa Tradition
- The Creation and Announcement of the NKT 4. The Identity of the NKT: Introduction
- History and Identity Construction in the NKT
- The NKT`s Organisational Structure
- Purity and Impurity
- Critique of Contemporary Buddhist Practice
- NKT Exclusivism
- The Missionary Imperative
- Engagement and Dialogue
- Adaptation within the NKT
- Dorje Shugden Reliance
- Crisis and Response: The Dorje Shugden Affair
- A Rejection of Modernity?
- The FPMT Re-visited PART THREE: THE ORDER OF BUDDHIST CONTEMPLATIVES 5. The Order of Buddhist Contemplatives: Background and Early Development: Introduction: Contextualising the OBC
- The Emergence of the Zen Mission Society
- The Ideological Development of the ZMS, 1962-1976
- Aspects of Kennett`s Zen
- Buddhism and Western Culture
- Buddhism and Gender
- The Adaptation of Zen for the West
- A Protestant Form of Zen?
- Religious Innovation and Charisma 6. The Lotus Blossom Period, 1976-1983: Introduction
- Zen Buddhism and Meditative Experience
- Kennett`s Religious Experience: Preliminary Considerations
- The Phenomenology of Kennett`s Experience
- A Contextual Explanation
- Developments and Innovations
- Assimilation and Rejection
- Strategies and Arguments
- Text and Context in the OBC: The Wild, White Goose
- The Storm Weathered 7. The Later Period: Routinisation and Consolidation: The Routinising Impulse
- The Structure and Identity of the OBC
- Kennett`s Later Teachings
- Assimilation and Stability in the Later Period
- Growth and Consolidation in Britain
- The OBC and the British Buddhist Context PART FOUR: EPILOGUE AND CONCLUSION 8. Epilogue and Conclusion: Recent Developments in the NKT
- Recent Developments in the OBC
- Buddhism and British Culture
- The Transplantation Process
- Policies and Patterns of Adaptation
- Constructing History and Resolving Conflict
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
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