The experience during the fellowship in research and collaboration, coupled with extensive theoretical and ethnographic work, has formed the basis for future research and writing. I am currently working on two articles from fieldwork carried out during the fellowship. The first looks at how animals are seen as companions and communicators in contemporary Australian Buddhism. The article will elucidate how, in discourse with customary acknowledgements of the preciousness of the human birth, certain practices attempt to develop respect for other creatures, including the occasional tiger snake that seeks a warm spot under the blanket of an advanced meditator. The second will look at how Australian Buddhists reduce waste as a key part of their Buddhist practice. In addition to ongoing research, and inspired by research during the fellowship I am, in collaboration with Jovan Maud, arranging a workshop at the Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology in July 2022, bringing together scholars engaging the theme of ‘Buddhism in the Anthropocene’. From this workshop we will co-edit a special issue on the topic which will be published in the open access Journal of Global Buddhism.
My research over the coming years will continue to seek to make tangible the links between religion, ecological destruction and protection, and economic, social, and material disparities. During the fellowship I submitted an ERC Consolidator Grant which engages Buddhist experiences of the Anthropocene, the night sky, and the new space race in Asia and the United States. This research project will look at how Buddhism interfaces ecological changes in the Anthropocene epoch and is grounded in a radical comparative approach based on long-term qualitative research, local engagements, and embodied artistic explorations.