Biographical Imperatives, Autobiographical Pacts: Hongyi Dashi and the Construction of Buddhist Lives in 20th c. China


DATE
Tuesday March 17, 2015
TIME
3:00 PM - 3:00 PM

The Robert H. N. Ho Family Foundation Program in Buddhism and Contemporary Society and the UBC Buddhist Studies Forum are delighted to welcome Professor Raoul Birnbaum (University of California, Santa Cruz). He will present a lecture entitled, Biographical Imperatives, Autobiographical Pacts: Hongyi Dashi and the Construction of Buddhist Lives in 20th c. China.

The elusive monk Hongi Dashi (弘一大師, 1880-1942), one of the pre-eminent Buddhists of twentieth-century China, was a complex man who lived in a complex time. This talk looks to Hongyi’s great interest in studying, editing, and composing biographical and autobiographical texts, as well as his careful visual self-representations through calligraphic works, self-portraits, and posed photographs. What was he doing and why? What relation may all of this have to the later construction of texts and images that attempt to say something about him?

About the Speaker:

Raoul Birnbaum is a professor of Buddhist studies and Rebele Chair in History of Art & Visual Culture at UC Santa Cruz. His publications include The Healing Buddha, Studies on the Mysteries of Mañjuśrī, and many other works. Current research focuses on two projects: a biographical study of the enigmatic and extravagantly talented Chinese Buddhist monk Hongyi; and a study of the seventeenth-century monk-painter Kuncan, as part of a larger project that will include a major exhibition at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art in late 2016.

For more information, please click here.

View PDF poster here.

Sponsor: The Robert H. N. Ho Family Foundation Program in Buddhism and Contemporary Society, UBC Buddhist Studies Forum
By: Professor Raoul Birnbaum, Buddhist Studies, University of California, Santa Cruz
Type: Event