‘Suffering in 2020’ topic of Institute for the Humanities presentation
Contact: John Burrow
STARKVILLE, Miss.—An expert on Buddhist philosophy and Eastern cultures will discuss the meaning of suffering and how it relates to 2020 during a fall speaker series hosted by ֱ State’s Institute for the Humanities.
Alex Vesey, an associate professor in the Department of Global and Transcultural Studies at Meiji Gakuin University in Japan will be interviewed Nov. 3 at 6:30 pm. on the by Julia Osman, Institute for the Humanities director and associate professor of history. The session is open to the public.
The presentation, “Why do we suffer? A Buddhist perspective on 2020,” is a collaboration between the institute and MSU’s Holmes Cultural Diversity Center. The HCDC also will stream the discussion.
Osman and Kei Mamiya, assistant director of the HCDC, said Vesey’s presentation aligns with International Education Week, Nov. 16-20.
“We thought because the presentation is online it would be really neat to invite someone international who we could never realistically expect to fly here,” Osman said, noting Vesey is one of Mamiya’s former college professors. “We also thought that with all the stress and difficulties of 2020, people might appreciate the perspective of a religion or thought system that contemplates the source of suffering and how to deal with it,” she said.
Mamiya said he hopes the program will provide the audience an opportunity “to open up their ways to understand the world” by learning a different worldview—Buddhism—and recognize “there are many other religions in the world and ways to look at and understand the world that we live in.”
Mamiya said Vesey’s presentation is noteworthy because “he can bring a transnational perspective as an American scholar who moved to Japan and has been doing research and participating in Buddhism.”
“I am eager to know more,” said Osman, who teaches about Buddhism in world history classes. “I also have questions about the religion based on my little bit of reading about it.”
Despite challenges brought on by the pandemic, Osman said that the institute has successfully transitioned to conducting their planned events in a virtual format.
“I’ve tried to look at the challenges from this year as opportunities for doing our programs in new ways or finding new ways to reach our audiences,” said Osman. “Having programs online has meant that we can reach larger audiences beyond the Golden Triangle and MSU, and we have had more freedom to ask a variety of people to speak since we do not need to worry about transportation.”
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