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Call for Papers

Theme: South-East Asia as a Crossroads for Buddhist Exchange
Subtitle: Pioneer European Buddhists and Asian Buddhist Networks
1860 – 1960
Type: International Conference
Institution: Study of Religions Department, University College Cork
Location: Cork (Ireland)
Date: 13.–15.9.2012
Deadline: 9.7.2012

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The recent discovery of the extraordinary life of ‘The Irish
Buddhist’ U Dhammaloka has stimulated new avenues of research into
numerous significant but neglected East-West and global Buddhist
encounters. This conference focuses on forgotten or under-represented
Buddhist pioneers, their connections and collaborations, and the
contribution of these individuals and networks to the construction of
Buddhist modernities.

Casting South-East Asia as a ‘cross roads’ invites contributions on
pioneer exchanges and connections not only between ‘the West’ and
‘Asia’ but also within Asia, from China, Korea and Japan through
Southeast Asia to India and Ceylon. The period to be covered, broadly
1860-1960, is intended to include the earliest documented pioneer
European [and e.g. Japanese] Buddhist practitioners of the colonial
period whilst stopping short of the mass interest in Buddhism of the
late 20th century. We are interested in any figures, groups or
networks whose commitment to Asian Buddhist praxis in the colonial
period contributed in some way to the emergence of modern global
Buddhism and whose role was pioneering, rather than following a
traditionally established path. We are equally interested in networks
of exchange and communication such as trade routes, monastic
interrelationships, military ventures, cultural exchanges, missionary
enterprises and imperialist and socialist (etc.) institutions and
ideas which enabled Buddhists to interact in pioneering ways during
this period.

Forgotten figures such as U Dhammaloka, despite their historical
significance for these exchanges in colonial Asia, have long been
obscured in conventional scholarly narratives which have presented a
very small selection of ‘pioneer’ figures found respectable within
today’s Western Buddhist lineages or canonised in Asian accounts.
Recent discoveries overturning these entrenched narratives have been
made possible in part by the new digitisation and indexing of
colonial-era newspapers, travel books, directories, missionary
reports and other obscure and disparate sources which can provide –
often fragmentary – pointers to lost lives and events which may in
the end be documented only through traditional archival research.
This conference aims to further this new and exciting field of
research by bringing together scholars with a shared interest in
global Buddhism and expertise in different periods and regions of
Asia and the West.

There are many contested issues and theoretical perspectives to be
explored in this context, and we welcome papers of a theoretical or
methodological nature so long as they are to some extent grounded in
empirical examples.

We intend to produce a journal special issue or edited volume based
on papers presented at the conference.

The conference will take place from Thursday afternoon 13th September
to Saturday morning 15th September 2012 and is hosted by the Study of
Religions Department, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland. There
is no conference fee but delegates will be responsible for their own
travel and accommodation; there is plenty of moderately priced
accommodation close by the University.  Cork Airport is a short
distance from the University and about 1hr by air from London and
other major European hubs. The conference is timed so as to be
compatible with that of the European Association of Southeast Asian
Archaeologists in Dublin.

The conference is co-organised by Prof Brian Bocking and Dr Phibul
Choompolpaisal (UCC Study of Religions Department) with an advisory
committee comprising Dr Laurence Cox (NUIM, Ireland), Prof Alicia
Turner (York University, Toronto), Dr Andrew Skilton (KCL, London)
and Dr Kate Crosby (SOAS, London), in association with the 12-month
postdoctoral research fellowship project ‘Continuities and
Transitions in Early Modern Thai Buddhism’ at UCC supported by the
Dhammakaya International Society of the United Kingdom.  The
Conference itself has a far wider remit than Thailand, and papers in
all regions are warmly welcomed.

The deadline for submission of abstracts is Monday 9 July 2012, but
abstracts will be considered as they are submitted from now on to
facilitate your travel planning. If you hope to attend the conference
we would appreciate an email indicating this a.s.a.p. Some limited
financial support for postgraduates may be available. If you wish to
apply for this, please submit your abstract as soon as possible but
in any case by the earlier deadline of Monday 2 July 2012 to Dr
Phibul Choompolpaisal, email: [email protected], indicating
this. Once your abstract is accepted you will be sent details of how
to apply.

With 12 presenters already confirmed from Japan, India, Britain, the
US and Ireland, this conference is set to be a significant event in
Buddhist and Southeast Asian studies.

We will organise the conference so as to maximise the time available
for discussion of each paper. To this end we are asking for
presentations of 15 – 20 minutes and encourage the use of handouts
for e.g. full papers, maps, etc. We can organise copying of this
material, including in colour when appropriate.

Enquiries, expressions of interest and abstracts should be emailed to
Prof Brian Bocking in Cork, email: [email protected] or to Dr
Phibul Choompolpaisal in Thailand, email: [email protected]   

Conference website:
http://buddhistcrossroads.wordpress.com




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