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Buddhist Studies Workshop

The Buddhist Studies Workshop, co-directed by Jacqueline I. Stone and Stephen F. Teiser, began in 1998 as an interdisciplinary forum for new scholarly work on Buddhism.  Interdisciplinary in design, Workshop participants come from various departments at Princeton, including Anthropology, Art and Archaeology, Comparative Literature, East Asian Studies, History, Sociology, and Religion.  The Workshop functions as a regional center as well, frequently drawing colleagues and students from the University of Pennsylvania, Rutgers University, and Columbia University.  The Workshop is dedicated to helping participants talk across the usual divides imposed by the disciplines, such as the divergence between text and image, documents and living informants, present and past.  It also constitutes a broad forum for the discussion of pan-Asian (and increasingly East-West) issues.  Many sessions focus on only one area of the world (e.g., Buddhism in India and South Asia, Southeast Asia, central Asia, Tibet and the Himalayas, Korea, Japan, Europe, or America), but draw participants who focus on other areas.

If you wish to be placed on the mailing list, please contact Barbara Bermel.

For a list of 2009-2010 Buddhist Studies Workshop lectures, click here to browse CSR events by Department. 

The Buddhist Studies Workshop is generously supported by the Provost, the Center for the Study of Religion, and the Department of Religion. 
Additional co-sponsors of specific events include:
The Program in East Asian Studies
The P.Y. and Kinmay W. Tang Center for East Asian Art
The Princeton University Library
The Council on the Humanities