Foreword
Jan Willis
Introduction
Emily McRae and George Yancy
1. “We Interrupt Your Regularly Scheduled Programming to Bring You
This Very Important Public Service Announcement . . .”: aka
Buddhism as Usual in the Academy
Sharon Suh
2. Undoing Whiteness in American Buddhist Modernism: Critical,
Collective, and Contextual Turns
Ann Gleig
3. White Delusion and Avidya: A Buddhist Approach to Understanding
and Deconstructing White Ignorance
Emily McRae
4. Whiteness and the Construction of Buddhist Philosophy in Meiji
Japan
Leah Kalmanson
5. Racism and Anatta: Black Buddhists, Embodiment, and
Interpretations of Non-Self
Rima Vesely-Flad
6. “The Tranquil Meditator”
Laurie Cassidy
7. “Beyond Vietnam”: Martin Luther King, Jr., Thích Nh?t H?nh, and
the Confluence of Black and Engaged Buddhism in the Vietnam War
Carolyn M. Jones Medine
8. The Unbearable Will to Whiteness
Jasmine Syedullah
9. Making Consciousness an Ethical Project: Moral Phenomenology in
Buddhist Ethics and White Anti-Racism
Jessica Locke
10. “bell hooks Made Me a Buddhist”: Liberatory Cross-Cultural
Learning—Or Is This Just Another Case of How White People Steal
Everything?
Carol J. Moeller
11. Excoriating the Demon of Whiteness from Within: Disrupting
Whiteness through the Tantric Buddhist Practice of Chöd and
Exploring Whiteness from Within the Tradition
Lama Justin von Bujdoss
12. The Interdependence and Emptiness of Whiteness
Bryce Huebner
13. Taking and Making Refuge in Racial [Whiteness] Awareness and
Racial Justice Work
Rhonda Magee
14. A Buddhist Phenomenology of the White Mind
Joy Brennan
15. The White Feminism in Rita Gross’ Critique of Gender Identities
and Reconstruction of Buddhism
Hsiao Lan Hu
Afterword
Charles Johnson
George Yancy is professor of philosophy at Emory University.
Emily McRae is assistant professor of philosophy at the University
of New Mexico.
This volume opens with a foreword by noted scholar of religion Jan
Willis in which she observes that although there is only one race,
Homo sapiens, racism still thrives. The collection documents views
from the peripheries that reveal that LGBTQ people and people of
color are challenged in white US Buddhist communities as if they
have no place. Often they are not seen at all. The way forward,
Laurie Cassidy writes, is to listen deeply and take responsibility
for the shared reality of all people. In his essay Bryce Huebner
argues that “races are not biologically real” and “race is a
conceptual fiction.” This book is about modifying practices as well
as changing minds. This reviewer was impressed by the
program—recommended by Jessica Locke (following Patricia Devine)—of
implicit bias intervention. Metta ("lovingkindness") meditation to
develop a competing and positive narrative to the racist one about
blackness is also effective. This important book offers ideas and
values that could change how meditation works. In an afterword
Charles Johnson writes that what is new here “is the effort to find
common ground between ancient Buddhist ideas and principles with
feminist theory, existential phenomenology, and Critical Race
Theory, and Critical Whiteness Studies.”
Summing Up: Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates
through faculty and professionals; general readers.
*Choice Reviews*
With essays from more than 15 thinkers, including Tricycle
contributing editor Charles Johnson, this book offers new scholarly
ideas on Buddhism’s equal access to liberation in the context of
the persistent racism experienced in America and beyond. The
editors write in the introduction that “racism or white supremacy
is like the water in which we all swim”—though only some of us
notice that we’re submerged. Contributors from across traditions,
who also draw on feminist and cultural studies in addition to race
theory, ask whether we can use Buddhist philosophy to put an end to
racism and white supremacy just as we apply teachings to cut
through our sense of “self.”
*Tricycle: The Buddist Review*
Buddhism and Whiteness is highly recommended to anyone interested
in modern Buddhism, as well as an interesting alternative lens for
those studying the development of racism in North America and
Europe.
*H-Net: Humanities and Social Science Reviews Online*
Part of the importance of this collection of essays lies in its
multipronged approach to both naming the white supremacist bedrock
of whiteness and describing Buddhist models for understanding how
it arises. . . Authors in this volume bring to light a number of
attitudes that help the reader “see” white ignorance in action. . .
. Relinquishing the privilege of being the authority on what
constitutes “real” Buddhism, who is a “real” American, and what
counts as “real” practice involves giving something up. That act,
and all the myriad ways whites can practice giving away unearned
privilege, can itself become a powerful method of merit-making, of
dana as a form of moral development in the pursuit of benefiting
others. In this respect and others, Buddhism and Whiteness offers
gifts of insight that constitute a wise and compassionate act of
merit.
*Buddhadharma*
It is high time for a book like this. For too long the story of the
transmission of Buddhism to the West has been told without
attention to the ways that transmission is inflected by race and
racism. This carefully curated collection of essays opens that
question, and offers a rich set of perspectives on the complex
interaction of Buddhist transmission, ideology, and practice with
race and racism in the West. A must read for anyone interested in
contemporary global Buddhism.
*Jay Garfield, Smith College*
It is impossible to read Buddhism and Whiteness and not experience
an itch for action. This timely—and indeed, “futurely”— volume
challenges all of us to reflect creatively and imaginatively about
how we can best make a politics of the possible a constitutive
contour of our religious lives, our efforts to learn about and from
Buddhism, and especially our everyday lives, even as all of these
are deeply conditioned and distorted by structural racism together
with other oppressive and exclusionary structures.
*Charles Hallisey, Harvard Divinity School*
Buddhism and Whiteness instructs with the spirit of Thich Naht
Hanh— “Freedom is not given to us by anyone, we have to cultivate
it.” Composting ignorance and violence, this volume seeds peace for
local and global care from US to Rohingya and Yemen
communities.
*Joy James, author of Seeking the Beloved Community*
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