Buddhism and Waste
eBook - ePub

Buddhism and Waste

The Excess, Discard, and Afterlife of Buddhist Consumption

Trine Brox, Elizabeth Williams-Oerberg, Trine Brox, Elizabeth Williams-Oerberg

  1. 208 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Buddhism and Waste

The Excess, Discard, and Afterlife of Buddhist Consumption

Trine Brox, Elizabeth Williams-Oerberg, Trine Brox, Elizabeth Williams-Oerberg

Book details
Table of contents
Citations

About This Book

In what ways do Buddhists recognize, define, and sort waste from non-waste? What happens to Buddhist-related waste? How do new practices of Buddhist consumption result in new forms of waste and consequently new ways of dealing with waste? This book explores these questions in a close examination of a religion that is often portrayed as anti-materialist and non-economic. It provides insight into the complexity of Buddhist consumption, conceptions of waste, and waste care. Examples include scripture that has been torn and cannot be read, or an amulet that has disintegrated, as well as garbage left behind on a pilgrimage, or the offerings of food and prayer scarves that create ecological contamination. Chapters cover mass-production and over-consumption, the wastefulness of consumerism, the by-products of Buddhist practices like rituals and festivals, and the impact of increased Buddhist consumption on religious practices and social relations. The book also looks at waste in terms of what is discarded, exploring issues of when and why particular objects and practices are sorted and handled as sacred and disposable. Contributors address how sacred materiality is destined to wear and decay, as well as ideas about redistribution, regeneration or recycling, and the idea of waste as afterlife.

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Information

Year
2022
ISBN
9781350195554
Edition
1
Subtopic
Buddhism

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Half-Title
  3. Series
  4. Title
  5. Contents
  6. List of Figures
  7. Acknowledgments
  8. Note on Sanskrit Diacritics
  9. Introduction: A Framework for Studying Buddhism and Waste
  10. 1 Generosity’s Limits: Buddhist Excess and Waste in Northeast Tibet
  11. 2 Modern Minimalism and the Magical Buddhist Art of Disposal
  12. 3 The Afterlives of Butsudan: Ambivalence and the Disposal of Home Altars in the United States and Canada
  13. 4 The Great Heisei Doll Massacre: Disposal and the Production of Ignorance in Contemporary Japan
  14. 5 Reincarnating Sacred Objects: The Recycling of Generative Efficacy and the Question of Waste in Tibetan and Himalayan Buddhist Material Cultures
  15. 6 Zombie Rubbish and Mummy Materiality: The Undead and the Fate of Mongolian Buddhist Waste
  16. 7 Something Rotten in Shangri-La: Green Buddhism, Brown Buddhism, and the Problem of Waste in Ladakh, India
  17. List of Contributors
  18. Index
  19. Copyright