Buddhism in Australia Traditions in Change

(vip2019) #1
1
The

emergence

ofsecular

insight

practice

in
Australia

DavidBubna—Litic and Winton

Higgins

In
Australia overthelastthree
decades.

secular

insight
(vupassana)

meditation

practice


has

increasingly


drawn

away

fromit 'Ihentvadin

origins,


thus

cxemplie


fying

a
widertrendinwestemBuddhistcirLi soverthesecondhalfof
thelast

century

to loosen
tieswith theirAsiantraditionsof

origin.


in 1998 Batehelor

articulated the

divergencebydrawing


acontrastbetween

’religions

Buddhism‘

and ‘dhanna

practice‘


in
his Buddhism wilhoui

Beliefs


(Batehclor l998a).

a

contrastwithresonancesin
the

changes


now

unfolding

inAustralia.He
elaborated

his

keyconcepts,


notleast
the

"deepagnostieism'


hediscernedintheBuddha's

own

teaching.


inother

writingspublished


inthesame

year(Batchelor

1998b:

[9980‘

Thecontrast

acknowledges


a

strongtendency


towardssecularizationmthe

rc-rcndering


ot'Buddhismin

culturallyappropriate


termsforwesterners
who.from

the
l970s.

began


to

practise


meditation

seriously


in thistraditionin

significant


numbers.

As
Gombrichand

Obeyesekere


remind
us.however,

this
trendnowvisiblein

western
countriessuchasAustraliahasAsian

(not

leastSri

Lankan)
precedents

going


backtothelastthreedecadesofthenineteenth

century

(1998:
chapter

6).

'lhe
elementsot‘thatearlierAsianBuddhistconfrontation
with

modernity


included

a
fresh

re-rcading


ot~canonical
texts.

promotion


of
serious

Ia)


dharma

practice.


scepticism


towardsclaimsto

onhodoxy.


monastic

authority


andthe

efficacy


of

ritual.anddismissalofthefolkloricaccretionsto

popular


observance.Allresur-

faced
inthelatetwentieth

century
developments

in
westerncountries.

In

Australia, however,

their

expression


hasbeen
mediatedand

complicated.


both

throughbeing


meldedwithcentralwestemmoral

concepts

and

through


the

growth


ofseriousdhanna

practice


fromthe
[9705.

ata
timewhenthecenitudes

of

modernity


wereto someextent

giving

way

toan
embraceof

uncertainty,


ambivalenceand

fragmentation.


Thisembracehasotlen
attractedthecatchall
(but

contestedand
unstable)term.
‘postmodemity'.

Wethus
needtohold

lightlyany

classificatory


schema


beit‘traditional'versus‘modem‘
BuddhismorMartin

Baumann's

(200I)suggested


heuristic

perindization


ol~
Buddhismintocanonical.

traditional,

modernand

today‘s
‘global‘stages

(

1998:

chapter


6).'

Nevertheless.as

long


aswehonourits
heuristicintent.

appreciation


ofBuddhism'scurrent

global


character

helpfully

sensitizesustothe

dangers


of

accounting


forcurrentdevel»

opmenls

in

parochial(western


or
national)terms.

while

avoiding

the

ironically

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