Spotlight Tibet
- Janet Gyatso, Hershey Professor of Buddhist Studies at Harvard University, will come to CU to discuss the Tibetan medicine and its Buddhist heritage. Traditional Tibetan medicine sometimes found its Buddhist heritage and its urge for empirical
- Tibetan Translation Issues Discussed at Recent ConferenceBuddhist luminaries, clustered in eastern Tibet in the nineteenth-century, composed numerous short texts of advice that are lively in their use of language and poignant in their pith
- The event, 鈥淰isions and prophecies in Tibetan Buddhism,鈥 had quite a large and diverse turnout. There were approximately 65-70 people in the audience (the room was Wolf Law 304, which seats only 51 so there were quite a few people standing).
- Join us next week for the following event:Visions & Prophecies in Tibetan Buddhism: An Evening with Khenpo Sodargye from Larung Buddhist AcademyTuesday, April 23 at 7:00 p.m.Wolf Law 304, CU-Boulder campusThis event is a rescheduling of the
- We are pleased to announce the following event:"Ecumenism in Tibet: Public Panel with Ringu Tulku"Thursday, April 18 at 7:00 p.m.British Studies Room, 5th Floor of Norlin Library, CU-Boulder campusIn nineteenth-century in Tibet, a circle of Buddhist
- The Center for Asian Studies is pleased to announce the rescheduling of a previously cancelled event. Khenpo Sodargye will visit CU-Boulder campus later this month:Visions and Prophecies in Tibetan BuddhismTuesday, April 23 at 7:00pmWolf Law 304, CU
- Join us for the Second Annual Center for Asian Studies Symposium, an interdisciplinary inquiry into contemporary Asian societies and cultures. This year, we explore the sounds of love and war, the voices of the subaltern and the middle classes
- Join us for our second Brown Bag event of the semester:"Following the Caterpillar Fungus: Nature, Commodity Chains, and the Place of Tibet in China's Uneven Geographies"Monday, February 11 at 12:00pmGuggenheim 201E, CU-Boulder campus This brown
- Join us for the Second Annual Center for Asian Studies Symposium, an interdisciplinary inquiry into contemporary Asian societies and cultures. This year, we explore the sounds of love and war, the voices of the subaltern and the middle classes
- CAS is pleased to announce a new course in Asian religions this spring: Women in Buddhism. Buddhist texts depict an array of female figures: cajoling goddesses, prostitute temptresses, enlightened queens, numinous hags, ardent nuns, scorned