The Emergence of Secular Insight Practice in Australia

Authors

  • David Bubna-Litic University of Technology, Sydney
  • Winton Higgins University of Technology, Sydney

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1307163

Abstract

In recent years insight (vipassana) practice in Australia has diversified in content and spawned new institutions that present a more secular face. These changes exemplify the development of global Buddhism elsewhere rather than some local, sui generis divergence from international trends. Nonetheless, the unusual prominence of Buddhist migrants in the Australian population has influenced the interaction between “traditional” and “western” Buddhists, and thus the emergence of the new trends. In interpreting the transformations in question, we make heuristic use both of Martin Baumann’s periodization of Buddhist history, with its characterization of the present stage as global, and Stephen Batchelor’s distinction between “religious Buddhism” and “dharma practice.” The Australian experience highlights the value of the earlier interaction between migrant and locally-born Buddhists, and the formative effect their later separation has on lay practice. This experience also points to the salience of forms of association when secular Buddhist practice melds with the Western values of inclusiveness and equality, not least in gender relations.

Author Biographies

David Bubna-Litic, University of Technology, Sydney

School of Management

Winton Higgins, University of Technology, Sydney

Institute for International Studies

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How to Cite

Bubna-Litic, David, and Winton Higgins. 2015. “The Emergence of Secular Insight Practice in Australia”. Journal of Global Buddhism 8 (February):157-73. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1307163.