Richard
King was formerly Professor of Asian Philosophy and Comparative
Religion and Chair of the Religion department at Derby University
(UK) and before that was Reader and Chair of Religious Studies at
Stirling University in Scotland. He has served as visiting professor
and guest lecturer at Liverpool Hope and Cambridge Universities
and has delivered public lectures at universities in Europe and
the United States.
Professor King's main research interests include: Indian philosophical
schools (especially Advaita Vedanta), Mahayana Buddhist thought
in India, the impact of coloniality on Indian wisdom traditions,
poststructuralist and postcolonial approaches to the study of religion,
and the comparative study of mysticism and spirituality.
He has published a number of articles on various aspects of Hindu
and Buddhist thought and theory and method in the study of religion
and is the author of four books. His publications include:-
Books
- Early Advaita Vedanta and Buddhism: The Mahayana Context
of the Gaudapadiya-Karika (State University of New York Press,
1995)
- An exploration of the impact of Buddhist thought upon the
philosophical formation of the Hindu school of Advaita (non-dualist)
Vedanta
- Orientalism and Religion. Postcolonial Theory, India and
"the Mystic East" (Routledge, 1999)
- o A wide-ranging discussion of orientalism and postcolonial
theory in relation to the study of religions, with a specific
focus on issues related to the representation of South Asian
Hindu and Buddhist traditions in the modern era.
- Indian Philosophy. An Introduction to Hindu and Buddhist
Thought (Edinburgh University Press, 1999/ Georgetown University
Press, 2000).
- A thematically-oriented overview of the various schools
of classical Indian thought with some discussion of the issues
confronting those interested in a global and postcolonial
approach to ‘philosophy'.
- Selling Spirituality. The Silent Takeover of Religion
(Routledge, 2005, co-authored with Jeremy Carrette)
- A critique of the impact of globalizing forms of capitalism
on contemporary constructions of "spirituality".
Recent Articles
- "Cartographies of the Imagination, Legacies of Colonialism:
The Discourse of Religion and the Mapping of Indic Traditions"
in Evam. Forum on Indian Representations Vol 3, Nos.
1 and 2: 272-89, January 2004.
- "Colonialism and Buddhism" in Robert Buswell (ed).,
Encyclopaedia of Buddhism (Palgrave-Macmillan), 2004.
- "Asian Traditions and Mysticism: The Legacy of William
James in the Study of Religions", in Jeremy Carrette (ed).,William
James and the Varieties of Religious Experience. A Centenary Celebration
(London and New York: Routledge, November 2004): 106-123.
- "Orientalism and the Study of Religions" in John Hinnells
(ed.), The Routledge Companion to the Study of Religion (Routledge,
2005)
- "Mysticism and Spirituality" in John Hinnells (ed.),
The Routledge Companion to the Study of Religion (Routledge.
2005)
Professor King is also co-editor of a volume of papers on Religion
and Violence in South Asia (Routledge, 2006) with Professor John
Hinnells (Liverpool Hope). He is currently working on issues arising
from the classification of Asian wisdom traditions as "religions"
and on a monograph examining the history of the rise of the concept
of "eastern spirituality". His research continues to explore
the interface between postcolonial studies / Indian philosophy /
mysticism and spirituality / religion and capitalism / and theory
and method debates in the study of religions.
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