Dear Colleagues,
Please consider this call for papers for AAR 2022.
Apologies for any cross-posting.
Indian and Chinese Religions Compared Unit
Call for Papers, AAR 2022:
We invite proposals from a wide range of disciplinary approaches exploring connections between and perspectives from the diverse traditions, regions, topics, and periods
of Indian and Chinese religions. We encourage individual and panel submissions that address:
Buddhist visual culture – Influences between Indian and Chinese art.
We encourage proposals on Buddhist visual or material culture and the interplay between texts, images, and rituals of Buddhism within the context of its transmission from India to China
up until the 11th century CE. The main focus should involve either comparing Indian and Chinese Buddhist visual and/or material cultures or aspects of either culture reflecting transmitted influences.
To express interest to submit a paper proposal please contact Dessi Vendova (dvendova@gtu.edu)
History of Emotions in India and China
While attention to the history of emotions has increased in Europe in recent decades, primarily focused on its history in Europe, the rich traditions of India and China
on the subject have received less attention, though deserved. For instance, in India aesthetics and rasa theory in contrast to ascetic and meditative analysis of positive
and negative emotions permeate cultural sensibilities. The model of “seven emotions” (or drives) in ancient China diversified over the centuries, including incorporating Buddhist models, medical theories, etc. We invite proposals on the history of emotions
in India and/or China. If interested in submitting a proposal, please contact Esther-Maria Guggenmos (esther-maria.guggenmos@fau.de)
The ‘Qizil Yoga Manual’ and Yogic Meditation on the Silk Road
The ‘Qizil Yoga Manual’ is a Buddhist text on meditation, found in the Kucha region on the northern Silk Road, and pieced together from
manuscript fragments by Dieter Schlingloff in the 1960s. This panel topic invites proposals that relate to the ‘Qizil Yoga Manual’ itself or the transmission of Indian texts on and knowledge of meditation or yogic-related practices into China.
To express interest to submit a paper proposal please contact Karen O’Brien-Kop (karen.obrien-kop@roehampton.ac.uk).
Contemporary Spiritual Technologies in Indian and Chinese Contexts
How do popular contemporary practices in the Indian and Chinese worlds draw selectively on earlier traditions, adapt techniques from outside Asia, or develop something
new? What roles are played by aspects of modern life, such as cultural identity, scientific discourse, political currents, national borders, and transnational flows? Are these techniques and technologies distinctly local, or do they reflect larger international
forces and concerns? And does it make sense to think in terms of “the spiritual” in these contexts at all? To enhance panel cohesion and interaction, participants in this panel will engage in discussion and mutual feedback in the months leading up to the
conference.
To express interest to submit a paper proposal please contact
Jon Keune (keunejon@msu.edu)
Responses to Catastrophe/Disaster in India and China
To link with the presidential theme of “catastrophe” at AAR 2022, this panel invites proposals that discuss how themes and events of catastrophe and disaster have been
responded to in the religious discourses, texts and practices of India and China. Proposals can address themes and perspectives in historical and/or modern contexts.
To express interest to submit a paper proposal please contact:
Eyal Aviv and Karen O’Brien-Kop
(karen.obrien-kop@roehampton.ac.uk and aviv@email.gwu.edu)
Please direct any general unit enquiries to the co-chairs: Eyal Aviv and Karen O’Brien-Kop
(karen.obrien-kop@roehampton.ac.uk and aviv@email.gwu.edu)
Best wishes
Dr. Karen O'Brien-Kop (FHEA)
Lecturer in Asian Religions and Ethics
Convenor Y1: BA Philosophy, Religion & Ethics; BA Philosophy
Howard 112, School of Humanities
University of Roehampton, London SW15 5PH
Tel: +44 (0)208 392 3427
New book here
Rethinking ‘Classical Yoga’ and Buddhism: Meditation, Metaphors, Materiality (Bloomsbury 2021)