Alumni

Daniel Stuart

Daniel Stuart received his Ph.D. in 2012, under the supervision of Alexander von Rospatt. His dissertation, entitled A Less Traveled Path: Meditation and Textual Practice in the Saddharmasmṛtyupasthāna(sūtra), deals with the history of Buddhist meditation in Northwest India during the first half of the first millennium CE. Over the years, Daniel has worked extensively on Buddhist sūtra literature and Buddhist manuscripts in various Asian languages and scripts. He works primarily with Sanskrit and Pāli materials, but also works with Indic...

Kenneth Tanaka

Kenneth Tanaka taught at the Institute of Buddhist Studies of the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley, California before being appointed professor of Buddhist Studies at Musashino University, Tokyo in 1998. He currently serves as President of the International Association of Shin Buddhist Studies, and had been an active member of the International Buddhist-Christian Theological Encounter sessions centered at Purdue University. His publications include, 1) The Dawn of Chinese Pure Land Buddhist Doctrine: Ching-ying Hui-yuan's Commentary to the Visualization Sutra. (The State...

Kyoku Tokuno

Emphasis: Chinese

Dissertation: Byways in Chinese Buddhism: The Book of Trapusa and Indigenous Scriptures[electronic resource](link is external). 1994. 381 p.

Yao-ming Tsai

Dissertation: Searching for the Origins of Mahāyāna and Moving toward a Better Understanding of Early Mahāyāna[electronic resource](link is external). 1997. 241 p.

Trent Walker

Trent Walker is a Khyentse Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow based at the Department of Thai Language, Chulalongkorn University (October 2018–September 2020). His dissertation, Unfolding Buddhism: Communal Scripts, Localized Translations, and the Work of the Dying in Cambodian Chanted Leporellos(link is external), was completed under the supervision of Alexander von Rospatt in 2018. He is...

Bruce Williams

Emphasis: Chinese

Dissertation: Mea Maxima Vikalpa: Repentance, Meditation, and the Dynamics of Liberation in Medieval Chinese Buddhism, 500-650 CE[electronic resource](link is external). 2002. 274 p.

Teri Yamada

Professor Shaffer Yamada (b. 1949) studied both classical Chinese and Sanskrit languages as an undergraduate at the University of California, Santa Barbara, where she received a bachelor's degree in Asian Studies before moving on to the University of California, Berkeley. There she continued her studies in classical Asian languages, adding Tibetan and modern Japanese, in order to pursue a comparative philological analysis of classical texts. From 1979-1986, she lived in Tokyo, Japan, where she studied in the departments of Indian and Buddhist Philosophy (University of Tokyo) and Buddhist...