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About This Series About This Series
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About This Book About This Book
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Extract
About This Series
The University of Hawai‘i Press has long been noted for its scholarly publications in, and commitment to, the field of Asian Studies. The present volume is the sixth in a series initiated by the press in keeping with that commitment, Dimensions of Asian Spirituality.
It is a most appropriate time for such a series. A number of the world’s religions—major and minor—originated in Asia, continue to influence significantly the lives of almost half of the world’s peoples, and should now be seen as global in scope, reach, and impact, with rich and varied resources for every citizen of the twenty-first century to explore.
Religion is at the heart of every culture. To be sure, cultures have also been influenced by climate, geology, and the consequent patterns of economic activity they have developed for the production and distribution of goods. Only a very minimal knowledge of physical geography is necessary to understand why African sculptors largely employed wood as their medium while their Italian Renaissance brethren usually worked with marble. But while necessary for understanding cultures—not least our own—matters of geography and economics will not be sufficient. Wood and marble are also found in China, yet Chinese sculptors carved Confucian sages, Daoist immortals, and bodhisattvas from their materials, not chiwaras or pietas.
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