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Bibframe Work

Title
Buddhist violence and religious authority
Type
Text
Monograph
Classification
LCC: BQ4570.V5 B835 2022 (Assigner: dlc) (Status: used by assigner)
DDC: 181/.043 full (Assigner: dlc)(Source: 23/eng/20220223)
Supplementary Content
bibliography (bibliography)
index (index)
Content
text (txt)
Summary
"This volume is a tribute to the work of Michael Jerryson, one of the initiators of the academic discourse on Buddhism and violence whose intellectual pursuits have resulted in a trailblazing shift in the academic study of Buddhism. The scholarly contributions in this volume include discussions of Buddhism and violence, religious authority and nationalism, whether Buddhist, Christian, white, or other"-- Provided by publisher.
Table Of Contents
Introduction: The Legacy of Michael Jerryson / Mark Juergensmeyer and Margo Kitts
Section I: Buddhism and Violence: Introduction / Stephen Jenkins
Dharma and Its Discontents / John M. Thompson
Buddhists and International Law / Ben Schonthal
Exorcising the Body Politic: The Question of Conversion at the Tibet-Mongol Interface / Matthew King
De-Centering the Normative in the Introduction to Buddhism Class / Nathan McGovern
But is it Buddhist? / Blaze Marpet
Humanizing the Rohingya Beyond Victimization / Grisel d'Elena
Section II: Religious Authority: Introduction: Religious Authority / Matthew Walton
Contested Authority: Evangelism as a Cultural System / Julie Ingersoll
Jerryson's “Exposure of Buddhism” and the Legacy of Violence in US War Culture / Kelly Denton-Borhaug
Making Authority from Apocalypse: Three Cases from Classical Islam / Jamel Velji
Affect in the Archives: Violence in Late Ancient Apocalyptic Texts / Abby Kulisz
Religion, Authority Grammar: The Scholarly Legacy of Secular Concepts / Andrew Atwell
Authorized Access Point
Buddhist violence and religious authority