Secular mindfulness requires an ideology of white conquest that
makes invisible the enduring efforts of Asian and
Asian-American Buddhists in maintaining the
legacy of mindfulness practices.
Published in 2016 in “Handbook of Mindfulness: Culture, Context, and Social Engagement” (Ronald E. Purser, David Forbes, and Adam Burke ed.) by Springer , Berlin.
Bibtex Data
@inproceedings{ hsu-funie2016-what-sound-of-one-invisible-hand,
title={{ W} hat { I} s the { S} ound of { O} ne { I} nvisible { H} and { C} lapping?: { N} eoliberalism, the { I} nvisibility of { A} sian and { A} sian { A} merican { B} uddhists, and { S} ecular { M} indfulness in { E} ducation} ,
author={ Funie Hsu} ,
booktitle={ Handbook of Mindfulness: Culture, Context, and Social Engagement} ,
editor={ Ronald E. Purser and David Forbes and Adam Burke} ,
publisher={ Springer} ,
address={ Berlin} ,
year=2016,
pages={ 369--381} ,
chapter=24,
keywords={ american,selling,neoliberal-america,asian-america} ,
doi={ 10.1007/978-3-319-44019-4_ 24} ,
openalex_ id={ W2533669693} ,
ranking={ rank3} ,
url={ https://www.academia.edu/30684271/What_ Is_ the_ Sound_ of_ One_ Invisible_ Hand_ Clapping_ Neoliberalism_ the_ Invisibility_ of_ Asian_ and_ Asian_ American_ Buddhists_ and_ Secular_ Mindfulness_ in_ Education}
}
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