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Virtual Orientalism Jane Iwamura (Assistant Professor of Religion and of American Studies and Ethnicity, Assistant Professor of Religion and of American Studies and Ethnicity, University of Southern California)

Virtual Orientalism By Jane Iwamura (Assistant Professor of Religion and of American Studies and Ethnicity, Assistant Professor of Religion and of American Studies and Ethnicity, University of Southern California)

Summary

Jane Iwamura examines contemporary fascination with Eastern spirituality and provides a cultural history of the representation of Asian religions in American mass media. At the heart of her study is the Oriental Monk, a non-sexual, solitary, conventionalized icon who generously and purposefully shares his wisdom with the West.

Virtual Orientalism Summary

Virtual Orientalism: Asian Religions and American Popular Culture by Jane Iwamura (Assistant Professor of Religion and of American Studies and Ethnicity, Assistant Professor of Religion and of American Studies and Ethnicity, University of Southern California)

Saffron-robed monks and long-haired gurus have become familiar characters on the American pop culture scene. Jane Iwamura examines the contemporary fascination with Eastern spirituality and provides a cultural history of the representation of Asian religions in American mass media. Initial engagements with Asian spiritual heritages were mediated by monks, gurus, bhikkhus, sages, sifus, healers, and masters from a wide variety of ethnic backgrounds and religious traditions. Virtual Orientalism shows the evolution of these interactions, from direct engagements with specific individuals, to mediated relations with a conventionalized icon. Visually and psychically compelling, the Oriental Monk becomes for Americans a ''figure of translation'' - a convenient symbol for alternative spiritualities and modes of being. Through the figure of the non-sexual, solitary Monk, who generously and purposefully shares his wisdom with the West, Asian religiosity is made manageable - psychologically, socially, and politically - for American popular culture.

Virtual Orientalism Reviews

Jane Iwamura has an uncanny and impressive way of combining popular culture, hermeneutics, studies in digitalization, categories of ethnic and racial formation, and US religious studies. This book provides an important introduction to a set of major Orientalist figures in popular genres that has not yet been given adequate scholarly attention. Iwamura's approach to popular culture is very deft: she not only pays close attention to the images at hand, but exposes what she takes to be the national and racial anxieties at play there through a close reading of the images' dissonant interpretations. * Judith Butler, Maxine Elliot Professor of Rhetoric and Comparative Literature at the University of California at Berkeley *

About Jane Iwamura (Assistant Professor of Religion and of American Studies and Ethnicity, Assistant Professor of Religion and of American Studies and Ethnicity, University of Southern California)

Jane Iwamura is Assistant Professor, School of Religion and Department of American Studies and Ethnicity, University of Southern California

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements ; Introduction ; Zen's Personality - D.T. Suzuki ; Hyperreal Samadhi - Maharishi Mahesh Yogi ; The Monk Goes Hollywood - Kung Fu ; Conclusion - Spiritual Romance Today ; Bibliography ; Index

Additional information

NPB9780199738601
9780199738601
0199738602
Virtual Orientalism: Asian Religions and American Popular Culture by Jane Iwamura (Assistant Professor of Religion and of American Studies and Ethnicity, Assistant Professor of Religion and of American Studies and Ethnicity, University of Southern California)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press Inc
2011-02-10
232
N/A
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