Introduction: Gregory P. Grieve/Richard Weiss
Tradition, Legitimation and Authority
Michel Despland: Tradition; Frederick S. Colby: The Rhetoric of
Innovative Tradition in the Festival Commemorating the Night of
Muhammad's Ascension; Aaron W. Hughes: The “Golden Age” of Muslim
Spain: Religious Identity and the Invention of a Tradition in
Modern Jewish Studies; Félix Ulombe Kaputo: Central African Women:
Victims between African and Christian Traditions; Michiaki Okuyama:
Historicizing Modern Shinto: A New Tradition of Yasukuni Shrine;
Titus Hjelm: Tradition as Legitimation in New Religious
Movements
Tradition, Agency and Identity
Susanna Morrill: Women and the Book of Mormon: The Creation and
Negotiation of a Latter-Day Saint Tradition; Jason A. Carbine:
Shwegyin Sasana: Continuity, Rupture, and Traditionalism in a
Buddhist Tradition; Richard Weiss: The Autonomy of Tradition:
Creating Space for Indian Medicine; Greg Johnson: Incarcerated
Tradition: Native Hawaiian Identities and Religious Practice in
Prison Contexts; Kocku von Stuckrad: Whose Tradition? Conflicting
Ideologies in Medieval and Early Modern Esotericism; Lee Rainey:
Confucianism and Tradition; Earle Waugh: Dispatches from Memory:
Genealogies of Tradition
Tradition, Modernity, and the West
Gregory P. Grieve: Histories of Tradition in Bhaktapur, Nepal: Or,
How to Compile A Contemporary Hindu Medieval City; Ira Robinson:
Hasid and Maskil: The Hasidic Tales of an American Yiddish
Journalist; Michael Hawley: Re-Orienting Tradition: Radhakrishnan's
Hinduism; David W. Machacek/Adrienne Fulco: Rights and Values in
the American Constitutional Tradition; Frank Usarski: (Re)Making
Tradition in an International Tibetan Buddhist Movement: A Lesson
from Lama Gangchen and Lama Michel; Steven Engler: Afterward:
Tradition’s Legacy
Steven Engler is an Instructor in the Humanities Department at Mount Royal College, Calgary, Canada and a Visiting Professor (2005-2006) in the Programa de Estudos Pos-Graduados em Ciencias da Religiao, Pontificia Universidade Catolica de Sao Paulo, Brazil. Gregory Price Grieve is an assistant professor in the Religious Studies Department of the University of North Carolina, Greensboro, U.S.A., where he is a specialist in South Asian and Himalayan religions.
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