Theravada Buddhism : contrary to nationalism?
This dissertation demonstrates how there are potentially core elements in Theravada Buddhism, relating to the religion's conception of a general order of existence (namely, the principles of impermanence, putting aside of self, and suffering), which may retain significant resonance in believ...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-761132020-11-01T08:39:22Z Theravada Buddhism : contrary to nationalism? Goh, Delwyn Heang Woon Norman Vesonadan Vasu S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies DRNTU::Social sciences::Sociology This dissertation demonstrates how there are potentially core elements in Theravada Buddhism, relating to the religion's conception of a general order of existence (namely, the principles of impermanence, putting aside of self, and suffering), which may retain significant resonance in believers' consciousness. The resulting narrative frame may be contradictory to the modem-day logic of nationalism, especially where it involves national identity and a desire for political sovereignty. To a lesser degree, there is also a certain individualistic streak in Theravada Buddhism that may run counter to how nationalism typically functions to mobilise and coordinate. The preceding thesis is supported by the older literature on Theravada Buddhism, e.g., the analyses of Melford Spiro, and opposed by recent writings on religious nationalism, e.g., from Brubaker and Friedland. The recent trend has been to generalise and posit a high degree of compatibility between religions and nationalism, even as Buddhism is omitted altogether from the discussion. Master of Science (Asian Studies) 2018-11-08T04:54:30Z 2018-11-08T04:54:30Z 2018 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76113 en 58 p. application/pdf |
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DRNTU::Social sciences::Sociology Goh, Delwyn Heang Woon Theravada Buddhism : contrary to nationalism? |
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This dissertation demonstrates how there are potentially core elements in
Theravada Buddhism, relating to the religion's conception of a general order of
existence (namely, the principles of impermanence, putting aside of self, and
suffering), which may retain significant resonance in believers' consciousness.
The resulting narrative frame may be contradictory to the modem-day logic of
nationalism, especially where it involves national identity and a desire for
political sovereignty. To a lesser degree, there is also a certain individualistic
streak in Theravada Buddhism that may run counter to how nationalism
typically functions to mobilise and coordinate.
The preceding thesis is supported by the older literature on Theravada
Buddhism, e.g., the analyses of Melford Spiro, and opposed by recent writings
on religious nationalism, e.g., from Brubaker and Friedland. The recent trend
has been to generalise and posit a high degree of compatibility between religions
and nationalism, even as Buddhism is omitted altogether from the discussion. |
author2 |
Norman Vesonadan Vasu |
author_facet |
Norman Vesonadan Vasu Goh, Delwyn Heang Woon |
format |
Theses and Dissertations |
author |
Goh, Delwyn Heang Woon |
author_sort |
Goh, Delwyn Heang Woon |
title |
Theravada Buddhism : contrary to nationalism? |
title_short |
Theravada Buddhism : contrary to nationalism? |
title_full |
Theravada Buddhism : contrary to nationalism? |
title_fullStr |
Theravada Buddhism : contrary to nationalism? |
title_full_unstemmed |
Theravada Buddhism : contrary to nationalism? |
title_sort |
theravada buddhism : contrary to nationalism? |
publishDate |
2018 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76113 |
_version_ |
1683494625482899456 |