{"id":476,"date":"2011-03-01T02:00:29","date_gmt":"2011-03-01T02:00:29","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/practicalmattersjournal.ecdsdev.org\/?p=476"},"modified":"2019-05-30T22:08:33","modified_gmt":"2019-05-31T02:08:33","slug":"new-geographies-of-religion-and-healing","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/pmcleanup.ecdsdev.org\/2011\/03\/01\/new-geographies-of-religion-and-healing\/","title":{"rendered":"New Geographies of Religion and Healing: States of the Field"},"content":{"rendered":"
I take my title from a classic essay by T. J. Hinrichs who, over a decade ago, mapped critical developments in her own field, the history of Chinese medicine.[1]<\/a> Hinrichs flags, for example, a movement away from an almost exclusive reliance on documentary research to the integration of perspectives and methods from other fields, including a sensibility that privileges “contradictions, ambiguities, resistance, and the marginal spaces of life over system, coherence, and elite versions of culture.”[2]<\/a> Indeed, such an approach is necessary because there are as many ways to interpret and study religion and healing as there are approaches to religious studies.<\/p>\n In one sense, this assertion should come as little surprise. After all, the one can reasonably be considered a subset of the other and therefore open to interpretation through the full spectrum of its disciplinary methods. Second, there is a natural point of intersection between many, if not most, religious and therapeutic traditions insofar as each addresses, interprets, and constructs responses to the experiences of suffering and affliction.[3]<\/a> Third, the study of religion and healing permeates the larger discipline. However, because an explicitly defined subfield has been long in the making, it is rare that scholars have the opportunity to get a handle on the full range of fine work that has been accomplished.<\/p>\n I am reminded of a visit I made years ago to the Gold Mountain Buddhist Monastery in San Francisco, California. The meditation hall housed long, low tables with meditation benches. Before each place, a sutra book rested on the table, covered with bright yellow embroidered satin.<\/p>\n