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How do contemporary Westerners and Tibetans understand not only
what it means to be 'Buddhist', but what it means to be hailed as
one from 'the West' or from 'Tibet'? This anthropological study
examines the encounter between Western travellers and Tibetan
exiles in Bodhanath, on the outskirts of Kathmandu, Nepal and
analyses the importance of Buddhism in discussions of political,
cultural and religious identity. Based on extensive field research
in Nepal, Buddhism Observed questions traditional assumptions about
Buddhism and examines the rarely considered phenomenon of Western
conversions to a non-Western religion. Scholars of Anthropology,
Religion and Cultural Studies will find here a refreshing insight
into how to approach 'other' societies, religions and cultures.
How do contemporary Westerners and Tibetans understand not only
what it means to be 'Buddhist', but what it means to be hailed as
one from 'the West' or from 'Tibet'? This anthropological study
examines the encounter between Western travellers and Tibetan
exiles in Bodhanath, on the outskirts of Kathmandu, Nepal and
analyses the importance of Buddhism in discussions of political,
cultural and religious identity. Moran examines how Tibetans and
Tibetan Buddhism are 'created' in the encounters taking place in
Bodhanath and how Western Buddhists come to terms with their
imagined, then reified culture and religion. Tibetan Buddhism has
become Bodhanath's cultural product par excellence, it is not only
a spectacle for foreign tourists to see, but a reminder of
national-culture for displaced Tibetans. Special focus is given
here to the ways in which Tibetan Buddhism has been presented as an
object to be observed, reflected upon, and internalized by Western
travellers, often at the feet of Tibetan lamas. perception of
Tibetan Buddhism, as well as the practices and narratives through
which Tibetan and Western Buddhist subjects are produced. Based on
extensive field research in Nepal, Buddhism Observed questions
traditional assumptions about Buddhism and examines the rarely
considered phenomenon of Western conversions to a non-Western
religion. Scholars of anthropology, religion and cultural studies
will find here a refreshing insight into how to approach 'other'
societies, religions and cultures.
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