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Wendi Adamek joined the Barnard Religion Department as Assistant Professor of
Chinese Religions in the fall of 2001. She completed her doctorate at
Stanford University in 1998, and was an assistant professor at the
University of Iowa from 1996-2000. She has traveled extensively in Asia,
including three years spent in Japan with the support of a Fulbright
research fellowship and a grant from the Society for the Preservation of
Buddhism. She also spent 2000-2001 and 2004-2005 in China on NEH and Fulbright fellowships.
Professor Adamek specializes in medieval Chinese Buddhism, and her current
research interests include Buddhist nuns of the Tang dynasty, Buddhist
donor practices, and the religious art of 5th-6th century China. She is the
author of The Mystique of
Transmission: On an Early Chan Text and its Contexts (Columbia, 2007),
as well as several articles on medieval Chinese Buddhism. Her courses include
Introduction to Asian Religions, Spiritual Journeys in Fiction,
Ecology, Culture and Religion, Chan/Zen Buddhism, Daoism (Taoism),
Chinese Religious Traditions, The Gift and Religion,
Readings in Chinese Buddhism, and graduate courses on topics in
theory and Asian religions. She is originally from Hawai'i and is also
involved with projects in ecology and the arts on Maui.
Complete CV (PDF, 80 KB)
Courses
- Self and Society in Asian Religions
- Chan/Zen Buddhism, Daoism (Taoism)
- Chinese Religious Traditions
- The Gift and Religion
- Readings in Chinese Buddhism
Office Hours (Spring 2008)
Thursdays 2-4 PM and by appointment.
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