Submitted to Program Units |
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1: Collective Karma and Karmic Collectives: Conversations without Borders Seminar |
Abstract for Online Program Book (maximum 150 words)
This panel explores the interplay between karma and time, examining diverse perspectives from Buddhist and non-Buddhist sources across different historical periods. Recent studies on karma have critiqued the individualist approach (that karma works on the basis of an individual who is both the doer of an action and the recipient of the action’s result) and the realist approach (that karma represents objective reality, separate from lived experience). Building on these studies, the panel investigates how individuals and groups have imagined time — as cyclic, apocalyptic, unreal, and non-linear — as a means through which they orient themselves and others in a world of inconceivable karmic causes and results. Each paper discusses a specific imagination of time to offer fresh insight into how individuals and communities and their karmic agencies have been conceived.
Papers
- The Apocalypse Can't Absolve your Sins: Karma and Time in a 9th-Century Buddhist Polemic
- Karmic Entanglements and Vessantara Jataka Arts: merit, mediation and imagination