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Keywords: charity
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Journal Articles
Journal:
Journal of Vietnamese Studies
Journal of Vietnamese Studies (2020) 15 (4): 33–62.
Published: 30 October 2020
...Sara Swenson In this article, I explore how Buddhist charity workers in Vietnam interpret rising cancer rates through understandings of karma. Rather than framing cancer as a primarily physical or medical phenomenon, volunteers state that cancer is a product of collective moral failure. Corruption...
Abstract
In this article, I explore how Buddhist charity workers in Vietnam interpret rising cancer rates through understandings of karma. Rather than framing cancer as a primarily physical or medical phenomenon, volunteers state that cancer is a product of collective moral failure. Corruption in public food production is both caused by and perpetuates bad karma, which negatively impacts global existence. Conversely, charity work creates merit, which can improve collective karma and benefit all living beings. I argue that through such interpretations of karma, Buddhist volunteers understand their charity at cancer hospitals as an affective and ethical form of public health intervention.
Journal Articles
Journal:
Journal of Vietnamese Studies
Journal of Vietnamese Studies (2020) 15 (4): 4–32.
Published: 30 October 2020
... ethical labor. © 2020 by The Regents of the University of California 2020 charity social stratification petty traders postsocialism Buddhism R E S E A R C H E S S A Y L E H O A N G A N H T H U Doing Bodhisattva s Work: Charity, Class, and Selfhood of Petty Traders in H Chí Minh City At...
Abstract
This paper explores the charitable work of Buddhist women who work as petty traders in Hồ Chí Minh City. By focusing on the social interaction between givers and recipients, it examines the traders’ class identity, their perception of social stratification, and their relationship with the state. Charitable work reveals the petty traders’ negotiations with the state and with other social groups to define their moral and social status in Vietnam’s society. These negotiations contribute to their self-identification as a moral social class and to their perception of trade as ethical labor.