Distinguished Lecture by Prof Tansen Sen | The Buddhist Cosmopolis: Connectivity, Diversity, and Materiality in the Buddhist World(s)

You are invited to a distinguished lecture “The Buddhist Cosmopolis: Connectivity, Diversity, and Materiality in the Buddhist World(s)” by Professor Tansen Sen (NYU Shanghai). Prof Sen will graciously serve as the distinguished speaker for the 2024 FASS Distinguished Lecture Series in Buddhist Studies, organized by the FASS Research Division at the NUS Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences.

Date and Time: Friday, 18 October 2024 | 7pm – 9:30pm
Venue: UTown Auditorium 2 | 2 College Avenue West, Level 1, Stephen Riady Centre, Singapore 138607
Registration: Eventbrite
Refreshments will be provided.

Programme

7:00 PM Registration
​7:30 PM ​Welcome Remarks by Professor Elaine Lynn-Ee Ho, FASS Vice Dean of Research (NUS Department of Geography)
7:35 PM Opening Remarks by Associate Professor Jack Meng-Tat Chia, Chair of Buddhist Studies Group (NUS Department of History)
7:40 PM Lecture by Distinguished Speaker, Professor Tansen Sen (NYU Shanghai Center for Global Asia)
8:30 PM Q & A and Discussion
9:00 PM Refreshments
9:30 PM End of Event

Abstract
The circulations of Buddhist ideas, literature, art, and people resulted in the creation of a connected spaces in Asia and beyond, which this presentation calls a “Buddhist cosmopolis.” In addition to explaining this idea of a Buddhist cosmopolis, the presentation examines the ways in which the circulations and the diversity of Buddhist practices and ideas could be studied and conceptualized. It specifically examines the spread of knowledge, art forms, and the travels of missionaries and pilgrims within various parts of the Buddhist cosmopolis to demonstrate the spatial and ideological connections, as well as the unique local traditions that emerged at multiple sites. The presentation suggests employing frameworks of “convergence,” “divergence,” “entanglements,” “translocality,” and other concepts related to mobility and connections to theorize this idea of a Buddhist cosmopolis. The understanding of a Buddhist cosmopolis, it argues, also helps comprehend the intricacies of transregional interactions, the impact the circulations of Buddhist ideas had in fostering them, and the unique geographies Buddhist mobilities have created over the past two millennia.

Speaker Bio
Tansen Sen is Professor of history and the Director of the Center for Global Asia at NYU Shanghai, and Associated Full Professor of History at New York University. Previously he was a faculty at the City University of New York and the founding head of the Nalanda Sriwijaya Center at the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, Singapore. He is the author of Buddhism, Diplomacy, and Trade: The Realignment of Sino-Indian Relations, 600-1400 (2003; 2016) and India, China, and the World: A Connected History (2017; 2018). He has co-authored (with Victor H. Mair) Traditional China in Asian and World History (2012), edited Buddhism across Asia: Networks of Material, Cultural and Intellectual Exchange (2014), and co-edited (with Burkhard Schnepel) Travelling Pasts: The Politics of Cultural Heritage in the Indian Ocean World (2019), and (with Brian Tsui) Beyond Pan-Asianism: Connecting China and India, 1840s-1960s (2021). He is currently at the Institute of Advanced Studies in Princeton working on a book on the Ming admiral Zheng He, a collaborative project on China-India interactions during the 1950s, and co-editing (with Engseng Ho) the Cambridge History of the Indian Ocean, volume 1.

About the FASS Distinguished Lecture Series in Buddhist Studies
The annual FASS Distinguished Lecture Series in Buddhist Studies, funded by an endowment established via a generous donation by the Buddha Tooth Relic Temple and Museum, brings a distinguished professor in Buddhist Studies to the National University of Singapore.

Date
Friday, 18 October 2024

Time
7:00 - 9:30 PM (Singapore Time)

Venue
UTown Auditorium 2, NUS | 2 College Avenue West, Level 1, Stephen Riady Centre, Singapore 138607