Yin-Cheng Distinguished Lecture Series: Tansen Sen (in-person)

Wed Mar 11 2026 at 05:00 pm to 06:20 pm UTC-07:00

UBC Asian Centre, Room 604 | Vancouver

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Yin-Cheng Distinguished Lecture Series: Tansen Sen (in-person)
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Yin-Cheng Distinguished Lecture Series: Tansen Sen, March 11, 2026, in-person
About this Event

Yin-Cheng Distinguished Lecture Series:
The Buddhist Cosmopolis: Connectivity, Diversity, and Materiality in Global Asia


Date: March 11, 2026, 5 pm – 6:20 pm PDT

Speaker: Dr. Tansen Sen (NYU Shanghai and NYU)

Discussant: Dr. Dorothy Wong (University of Virginia)

Webpage: https://frogbear.org/yin-cheng-distinguished-lecture-series-tansen-sen/


Abstract

The circulation of Buddhist ideas, texts, artistic forms, and individuals gave rise to—and continues to sustain—a network of interconnected yet heterogeneous spaces across Asia and beyond, conceptualized here as a “Buddhist cosmopolis.” This presentation critically explicates the concept of the Buddhist cosmopolis and examines how its circulatory processes and diverse practices may be analyzed within the emerging analytical framework of Global Asia. It focuses in particular on the transmission of knowledge, the dissemination of visual culture, and the movements of missionaries and pilgrims, in order to illuminate both the spatial and ideological linkages that connected distant regions, as well as the distinctive local traditions that emerged across multiple sites. The presentation argues that approaching the Buddhist cosmopolis through the lenses of “convergence,” “divergence,” “entanglements,” and “translocality” yields critical insights into the dynamics of mobility and connectivity central to Global Asian studies. More broadly, it suggests that the concept of the Buddhist cosmopolis enhances our understanding of transregional interactions, the transformative capacities of Buddhist circulatory networks, and the complex spatial and temporal imaginaries generated by Buddhist mobilities over the past two millennia.


About the Speaker

Tansen Sen is Professor of history and the Director of the Center for Global Asia at NYU Shanghai, and Associated Full Professor of History at New York University. Previously he was a faculty at the City University of New York and the founding head of the Nalanda Sriwijaya Center at the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, Singapore. He is the author of Buddhism, Diplomacy, and Trade: The Realignment of Sino-Indian Relations, 600-1400 (2003; 2016) and India, China, and the World: A Connected History (2017; 2018). He has co-authored (with Victor H. Mair) Traditional China in Asian and World History (2012), edited Buddhism across Asia: Networks of Material, Cultural and Intellectual Exchange (2014), and co-edited (with Burkhard Schnepel) Travelling Pasts: The Politics of Cultural Heritage in the Indian Ocean World (2019), and (with Brian Tsui) Beyond Pan-Asianism: Connecting China and India, 1840s-1960s (2021). He is currently working on a book on the Ming admiral Zheng He, a collaborative project on China-India interactions during the 1950s, and co-editing (with Engseng Ho) the Cambridge History of the Indian Ocean, volume 1.


About the Discussant

Dorothy C. Wong is currently Professor of Art History at the University of Virginia. Specializing in Buddhist art of China during the first millennium CE, her research addresses topics of art in relation to religion and society, and of the relationship between religious texts/doctrine and visual representations. In addition to many articles, she has published (2004; Chinese edition 2011), Hōryūji Reconsidered (editor and contributing author, 2008), (co-editor with Gustav Heldt, and contributing author, 2014), (2018; Chinese edition forthcoming), , vol. 50 of Ars Orientalis (editor and contributing author, 2020), and (editor and contributing author, 2022). Currently she is working together with about two dozen international scholars researching the topic of “miraculous images” in global perspectives, trying to understand what “miracles” mean in different cultures and how and when people ascribe material objects with spiritual agency. She is also completing a book manuscript entitled The First Image of the Buddha.


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Event Venue & Nearby Stays

UBC Asian Centre, Room 604, 1871 West Mall, Vancouver, Canada

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