Event
Burmese Buddhist Exceptionalism and the Violence of Religious Tolerance
East Southeast Asia Colloquium Co-sponsor with Religious Studies
Alicia Turner, York University
Early European accounts of Burma expressed shock at the presence of what they understood to be liberal modern values imbedded in what would soon be a British colony in Southeast Asia. Burma was, to them, an exception in Asia, where religious tolerance and freedom for women were enshrined. After a half a century of this discourse, that elevated Burmese above Indians and Chinese, late nineteenth century scholars the origin of these surprisingly modern values in Buddhism, shifting them from the essence of a people to a World Religion. In these depictions the Buddha becomes a great liberator, who has freed Asian people to live in line with European Liberalism. And yet as much as this discourse valorized Burmese people and Buddhism, it worked to racialize Hindus and Muslims with devastating implications into the present. Working with Wendy Brown’s theories I develop an account of how tolerance racializes religious difference.
Alicia Turner is interested in the intersections of religion, colonialism, secularism and nationalism in Southeast Asia, with a particular focus on Buddhism in Burma (Myanmar) over the past 150 years. Her book Saving Buddhism: The Impermanence of Religion in Colonial Burma (Hawai'i 2014) explores the fluid nature of the concepts of sāsana, identity and religion through a study of Buddhist lay associations in colonial Burma. She has also co-authored The Irish Buddhist (OUP 2020) with Laurence Cox and Brian Bocking, a biography of an Irish sailor and agitator turned Buddhist monk. Her current project is a book on the genealogy of religious difference and violence in Burma Myanmar, focusing on the entanglement of religious identity and gender.
This is a hybrid event. Register here.