Bernard Faure (born 1948) is a Franco-American author and scholar of Asian religions, who focuses on Chan/Zen and Japanese esoteric Buddhism. His work draws on cultural theory, anthropology, and gender studies. He is currently a Kao Professor of Japanese Religion at Columbia University and an Emeritus Professor of Religious Studies (and formerly Professor of Chinese Religions) at Stanford University. He also previously taught at Cornell University, and has been a visiting a professor at the University of Tokyo, the University of Sydney, and the ÃÂcole Pratique des Hautes ÃÂtudes in Paris. He co-founded the Center for Buddhist Studies at Stanford University and the ARC: Asian Religions and Cultures Series within Stanford University Press. He is also the founder and co-director of the Columbia Center for Buddhism and East Asian Religions (C-BEAR). His work has been translated into several Asian and European languages.
Education
Faure graduated from the Institut dâÂÂÃÂtudes Politiques as well as the ÃÂcole Nationale des Langues Orientales Vivantes in Paris and received a Doctorat dâÂÂÃÂtat from the Université de Paris-VII in 1984. He also conducted research at Kyoto University for many years.
Bibliography
Faure has written a number of books in French and English, including:
- Les Mille et Une Vies du Bouddha, Editions du Seuil (2018)
- The Fluid Pantheon, University of Hawaii Press (2015)
- Protectors and Predators, University of Hawaii Press (2015)
- Le Traité de Bodhidharma: Première Anthologie du Chan, Le Seuil (2012)
- LâÂÂimaginaire Zen: LâÂÂUnivers Mental dâÂÂun Moine Bouddhiste Japonais, Les Belles Lettres (2010)
- Unmasking Buddhism, Wiley-Blackwell (2008)
- Bouddhisme et Violence, Le Cavalier Bleu (2008)
- The Power of Denial: Buddhism, Purity and Gender, Princeton University Press (2003)
- Double Exposure: Cutting against Western and Buddhist Discourses, Stanford University Press (2003)
- The Red Thread: Buddhist Approaches to Sexuality, Princeton University Press (1998)
- The Will to Orthodoxy: A Critical Genealogy of Northern Chan Buddhism, Stanford University Press (1997)
- Chan Insights and Oversights: an Epistemological Critique of the Chan Tradition, Princeton University Press (1996)
- Visions of Power: Imagining Medieval Japanese Buddhism, Princeton University Press (1996)
- Bouddhisme, Liana Levi (1996), translated into English, German, Dutch, and Italian
- Le Bouddhisme, Flammarion (1996)
- The Rhetoric of Immediacy: A Cultural Critique of Chan/Zen Buddhism, Princeton University Press (1994)
- La Mort Dans les Religions dâÂÂAsie, Flammarion (1994)
- Le Bouddhisme Chan en Mal dâÂÂHistoire, EFEO (1989)
He has edited or co-edited the following works:
- âÂÂThe Way of Yin and Yang (OnmyÃ
ÂdÃ
Â)," special issue of the Cahiers dâÂÂExtrême-Asie (2014)
- "Japanese Buddhism and the Performing Arts (geinÃ
Â)," special issue of Journal of Religion in Japan (2013)
- âÂÂShugendÃ
Â," special issue of the Cahiers dâÂÂExtrême-Asie (2011)
- "Medieval Shinto," special issue of the Cahiers dâÂÂExtrême-Asie (2008)
- Chinese Poetry and Prophecy by Michel Strickmann, Stanford University Press (2005)
- Chan Buddhism in Ritual Context, RoutledgeCurzon (2003)
- âÂÂBuddhist Priests, Kings, and Marginals: Studies on Medieval Japanese Buddhism," special issue of the Cahiers dâÂÂExtrême-Asie (2002-2003)
- Chinese Magical Medicine by Michel Strickmann, Stanford University Press (2002)
He has also published a large number of articles, including most recently:
- "BuddhismâÂÂs Black Holes: From Ontology to HauntologyâÂÂ, International Journal of Buddhist Thought & Culture 27 (2) (2017)
- "Can (and Should) Neuroscience Naturalize Buddhism?âÂÂ, International Journal of Buddhist Thought & Culture 27, 1 (2017)
- âÂÂBuddhism Ab Ovo: Aspects of Embryological Discourse in Medieval Japanese BuddhismâÂÂ, in Anna Andreeva and Dominic Steavu, eds., Transforming the Void: Embryological Discourse and Reproductive Imagery in East Asian Buddhism, Brill (2015).
- âÂÂIndic Influences on Chinese Mythology: King Yama and his Acolytes as Gods of Destinyâ in Meir Shahar and John Kieschnick, India in the Chinese Imagination (2013)
- âÂÂThe Impact of Tantrism on Japanese Religious Traditions: The Cult of the Three Devasâ in Ivstan Keul, ed., Transformations and Transfer of Tantra in Asia and Beyond, Walter de Gruyter (2012)
- âÂÂA Gray Matter: Another Look at Buddhism and Neuroscienceâ in Tricycle (2012)
- âÂÂBuddhism and Symbolic Violenceâ in Andrew Murphy, ed. The Blackwell Companion to Religion and Violence, Blackwell (2011)
- âÂÂFrom Bodhidharma to Daruma: The Hidden Life of a Zen Patriarchâ in Japan Review 23 (2011)
- âÂÂIn the Quiet of the Monastery: Buddhist Controversies over Quietismâ in Common Knowledge 16 (2010)
References