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Bhikshuni Lozang Trinlae

My scholarly work has pioneered the use of phenomenological qualitative research methods to empirically discern contemplative and spiritual care characteristics of millennia-old Tibetan and Nepali Buddhist Vajrayāna meditations expressed in the form of religious rituals and group liturgical practices. This work has helped dispel popular prejudices suggesting such religious practices are merely superstitions or a naive form of worship by demonstrating the linguistic and cognitive roles of contemplative symbols in learning Middle Way philosophy and compassionate affect cultivation through the use of traditional meditation techniques.

Two of my current research projects are related to UNESCO World Heritage Sites in Nepal: one related to Namche Gompa (Temple) in Sagarmāthā Mt. Everest National Park, which is several days’ walk from the nearest road, and situated at ~3400m altitude, and the other at the Swayambhunath temple of Kathmandu Valley.

Both projects include transcription, transliteration, and translation of primary Buddhist texts. In the case of the Namche Gompa Dumje Festival project, I am working to preserve 100-year old hand-written scrolls of traditional Buddhist ceremonies of the Sherpa community’ s summer festival.

Most of my publications are listed below … due to certain moral and ethical concerns, I do not use online academic social media sites using servers connected to govt intelligence agency funding.  Kindly visit my page on the Estonian Research Information System for a complete listing.

Cheers and congratulations to Luc.edu for hosting this blog listing!

Trinlae, Bhikshuni Lozang. “How to Communicate Complex Spiritual Care Practices of Religious Minorities Using Empirical, Clinical Language: “Proof of Principle” Field Research from Vajrayāna Buddhism.” In Multifaith Perspectives in Spiritual & Religious Care: Change, Challenge and Transformation. Edited by Mohamed Taher. Change, Challenge and Transformation: Canadian Multifaith Federation, forthcoming 2019/2020.

———. “Buddhist Liturgy as a Transformative Mode of Spiritual Care.” In Pastoral and Spiritual Care Across Religions and Cultures II: Spiritual Care and Migration. Edited by Isabelle Noth and Claudia K. Reichenbach, 95–112. Berlin: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht Verlage, 2018. Accessed November 11, 2019.

———. Kun-mKhyen Pad-ma dKar-po’s Amitāyus Tradition of Vajrayāna Buddhist Transformative Care: Contemplative Text, Phenomenological Experience, and Epistemological Process. Zurich: LIT-Verlag, 2017. Also published as in Nepal as Kun-mKhyen Pad-ma dKar-po’s Amitāyus Tradition of Vajrayāna Buddhism: Contemplative Text, Phenomenological Experience, and Epistemological Process. Kathmandu: Vajra Books, 2018.

———. “Is South Asia’s Buddhist Leader the Gyalwang Drukpa an Ecofeminist? Dialectical, Grounded Analysis of Eminent Feminist Theology Illuminates the Foundations for a Vajrayana Buddhist Ecofeminism.” International Journal of Dharma Studies 3 (1): 3, 2015.

———. “Prospects for a Buddhist Practical Theology.” International Journal of Practical Theology 18 (1): 7–22, 2014. doi:10.1515/ijpt-2014-0002.

———. “Fearlessness v. Recklessness: A Refutation of Buddhist Gender Essentialism and Chauvinism: Reconsidering the Marks and Signs of a Buddha.” Exemplar, The Journal of South Asian Studies 2 (1), 2013b.

———. “Leveraging Inter-Religious Dialogue into Transformative Action Using Practical Theology’s Reflexive Frameworks.” Journal of Inter-Religious Dialogue, 51–60, 2013c.

———. “The Mūlasarvāstivāda Bhikṣuṇī Has the Horns of a Rabbit : Why the Master’s Tools Will Never Reconstruct the Master’s House.” Journal of Buddhist Ethics 17, 2010.

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Anna-Alexandra Fodde-Reguer

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Xiaoming Hou

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Liz Wilson

Liz Wilson is Professor of Comparative Religion at Miami University of Ohio. She earned her doctorate at the University of Chicago Divinity School, specializing in pre-modern Indian Buddhism, especially Gupta-era narrative literatures. Her primary analytical lenses are gender, sexuality, gerontology, and family-formation.

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Daigengna Duoer

Daigengna Duoer (pronounced “dye-gain-na” “door”) is a historian of Buddhism in early 20th-century Inner Mongolia and Manchuria. She examines issues of modernity, colonialism, and secularity in Buddhism. Her current research projects trace transnational networks of Buddhist and non-Buddhist agents in early 20th-century Inner and East Asia.

Daigengna Duoer is currently a Ph.D. student in the Religious Studies Department at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

Daigengna Duoer is interested in religion, specifically Buddhism in twentieth-century Inner Mongolia and Manchuria. She studies transnational networks of Buddhism in modern East Asia and looks at Buddhism amongst other religions such as shamanism, Shinto, Islam, and Christianity in Inner Mongolia, Manchuria/Manchukuo, the Republic of China (1912-1949), and Tibet. Her work aims to create conversations about Buddhism and modernity, both about how Buddhism was regulated under different political rules and secular law and about how various agencies on the ground have experienced them.

Daigengna works with Chinese, Japanese, Tibetan, Mongolian, and French sources.

She completed her B.A. in Buddhist Studies and Art History and M.A. in Buddhist Studies at the University of Toronto.

Daigengna is also a host for the New Books in East Asia Studies Podcast, a channel on the New Books Network.

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Aura Di Febo

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Lina Verchery

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Melissa Anne-Marie Curley

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Xingyi Wang

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Karin Narita