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Buddhist Temporality and Interpretations of Mass Atrocity in Cambodia (Anne Hansen lecture)

March 23, 2017 @ 3:30 pm - 5:00 pm

Lecture by Anne Hansen
Professor of Religious Studies and Southeast Asian History
University of Wisconsin-Madison

Buddhist prophecies about the end of our time and the dawning of a new era tied to the enlightenment of the fifth buddha in our kalpa or “epoch” have circulated widely across the Buddhist world for nearly two millennia. In Cambodia, these millenarian prophesies have also served as a powerful and pervasive response to and explanation for the genocidal Khmer Rouge regime, one that is rarely acknowledged in scholarly interpretations of recent Cambodian history. This talk draws on my current research investigating Buddhist prophesies that have inspired millenarian poetry, prose and political and religious movements in Cambodia from the colonial era to the post-Socialism of the 1990s. It will raise intertwined questions of whether and how Buddhist prophetic conceptions of temporality might serve as an alternative frame for understanding the temporality of the Cold War in Cambodia as well as questions about the ethics of representing the suffering of others in scholarship.

Presented by the UNC-Chapel Hill faculty working group Southeast Asian Approaches, the Department of Religious Studies and the Carolina Asia Center.

Details

Date:
March 23, 2017
Time:
3:30 pm - 5:00 pm

Venue

FedEx Global Education Center, Room 1009
Chapel Hill, 27599 United States