Localization, Globalization and Glocalization Paradigm Shifts in the Study of Transmission and Transformation of Buddhism in Asia and Beyond
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ArtikelUtgivningsinformation: CH MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2026Beskrivning: 1 electronic resource (372 p.)Innehållstyp: - text
- computer
- online resource
- 9783725862788
- 9783725862795
- Philosophy and Religion
- Religion and beliefs
- *Tattvasiddhiśāstra
- Anupradāna
- Authenticity
- Bilingual Tibetan–Chinese glossary
- Body
- Bright Hall 明堂
- Buddhist Apocryphal Sutras
- Buddhist canons
- Buddhist sangha
- Cakravartin 轉輪聖王
- Cetanā
- Chan Buddhism
- Charismatic monks
- Chenghsi masters
- Chengshi school
- Chinese Buddhist translations
- Contemporary Chinese Mahāyāna Buddhism
- Contemporary Theravāda Buddhism
- Dance
- Daoxuan
- Dharmaguptaka
- Dunhuang
- Early Chinese Buddhist translations
- Fasting Buddha
- Faxiu
- Fayun Monastery
- Fozhao Gao
- Gandhara
- Gandhāra
- Gilt bronze Buddha statuette
- Guanlong region
- Guifeng Zongmi 圭峰宗密
- History of Chinese characters
- Huangbo 黃檗
- Huayan Grotto 華嚴洞
- India
- Jamāl Gaṛhī Monastery
- Kizil
- Kumārajīva
- Li Tongxuan 李通玄
- Lineages of texts
- Literacy rate
- Liu-Zhao sect 柳趙教派
- Lüxu 律序
- Mahāmāyā Sutra
- Miracle tales
- Modern Buddhism
- Monastic education
- Monastic identities and recognition
- Myanmar
- Northern Wei Dynasty
- Novice monks
- Paramārtha
- Pelliot tibétain 1257
- Relic veneration
- Religious minority
- Scripture re
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This Special Issue Reprint examines Buddhism's transmission and Sinification as a major case of intercultural exchange in Asia. Tracing its spread from India to China and across East and Southeast Asia, it presents Buddhism not as mere religious import but as a dynamic force of cultural, philosophical, and institutional transformation—showing how sustained encounters between Indian Buddhist traditions and Chinese thought, ritual life, and social institutions produced a distinctive Chinese Buddhism with lasting regional influence. Situating this within global history, it challenges civilizational clash narratives by highlighting patterns of exchange, adaptation, and synthesis. While core doctrines were preserved, their interpretation, practice, textual production, institutional organization, and sacred geography were reshaped through engagement with Confucian, Daoist, and popular traditions. The formation of the Chinese Buddhist canon, transformation of monastic life, and emergence of new devotional cults illustrate this metamorphosis. Framing Sinification as historical "glocalization," this volume offers insights into how religious traditions localize while sustaining transregional networks. Key themes include intercivilizational interaction, textual and commercial networks, sacred space formation, and geopolitical consequences of Buddhism's transborder transmission, providing both historical case study and conceptual framework for understanding cultural interaction, adaptation, and coexistence globally.
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