 224 pp. May 2007
cloth, ISBN 978-0-8248-2996-4, $47.00
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Keywords: |
Pacific Asia religion Buddhism sociology |
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Land of Beautiful Vision: Making a Buddhist Sacred Place in New Zealand
by Sally McAra
Topics in Contemporary Buddhism
“An extraordinary achievement. . . . Sally McAra and UHP are to be congratulated on a fine book that should be in every library in New Zealand and on many private shelves as well.” —SITES: A Journal of Anthropology and Cultural Studies (4:2, 2007)
Land of Beautiful Vision is the first book-length ethnography to address the role of material culture in contemporary adaptations of Buddhism and the first to focus on convert Buddhists in New Zealand. Sally McAra takes as her subject a fascinating instance of an ongoing creative process whereby a global religion is made locally meaningful through the construction of a Buddhist sacred place. She uses an in-depth case study of a small religious structure, a stupa, in rural New Zealand to explore larger issues related to the contemporary surge in interest in Buddhism and religious globalization. Her research extends beyond the level of public discourse on Buddhism to investigate narratives of members of the Friends of the Western Buddhist Order (FWBO) about their relationship with the land, analyzing these and the FWBO’s transformative project through a thematic focus on key symbolic landmarks at their site, Sudarshanaloka. In considering cross-cultural interactions resulting in syncretism or indigenization of alien religions, many anthropological studies concentrate on the unequal power relations between colonizing and colonized peoples. McAra extrapolates from this literature to look at a situation where the underlying power relations are quite different. She focuses on individuals in an organization whose members seek to appropriate knowledge from an “Eastern” tradition to remake their own society—one shaped by its unresolved colonizing past. 21 illus.
Sally McAra is an anthropologist at the University of Auckland, New Zealand, conducting research into the cross-cultural translation of Buddhism in Bendigo, Australia.
Read the introduction (PDF).
table of contents
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