Harding, John

Professor, East Asian Religions

History and Religion Department

Phone
(403) 317-2834
Email
john.harding@uleth.ca

About Me

Professor of East Asian Religions

Chair, Religious Studies 2010-2013, 2015, 2018, July 2022 until RELS merged with History July 1, 2023. Following the merger, we continue to offer both a major and a minor in Religious Studies (and in History) as well as a minor in Asian Studies within this newly merged departmental structure.

Founding Coordinator, Asian Studies (2013-2017, 2022)

From 2019-22, initiated and coordinated a new theme on "Challenging Worldviews" for the Global Citizen Cohort (GCC) Program

I will be on research leave from July 2023 - June 2024 including as a visiting scholar at Aarhus University, Denmark in April 2024

Biography

See bio with links at http://scholar.ulethbridge.ca/jsh/content/john-s-harding-bio

John Harding received his BA in Asian Studies with a minor in Religion from the University of Puget Sound in 1994. He pursued his graduate work in Religious Studies at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia along with research in Japan and one year at the University of Cambridge in England. John received his Ph.D. from Penn in 2003 under the supervision of William R. LaFleur shortly before joining the Religious Studies Department at the University of Lethbridge.

He was awarded tenure and promotion to Associate Professor in spring 2009 and served as department chair from 2010-2013. He was promoted to Professor in 2023 and served as chair several other times, most recently in 2022-2023. Additionally, he founded the minor in Asian Studies, and coordinated the Asian Studies program for a number of years. Harding also served as the coordinator for the "Challenging Worldviews" theme of the Global Citizenship Cohort program (GCC). He initiated this theme in 2019 and and coordinated it for three years.

Harding worked closely with Victor Sogen Hori (McGill) and Alexander Soucy (Saint Mary's University) for more than 15 years including their collaborative research project, "The Modernization of Buddhism in Global Perspective," which was funded by a SSHRC Insight Grant. Their third collaborative book, Buddhism in the Global Eye: Beyond East and West was published in spring 2020.

Current Research


​Title
​Location
​Principal Investigator ​Co-Researchers ​Grant Agency
​Grant Amount
Grant Time Period ​
The Modernization of Buddhism in Global Perspective John Harding Victor Hori at McGill University and Alexander Soucy at Saint Mary's University
The Modernization of Buddhism in Global Perspective John Harding Victor Hori at McGill University and Alexander Soucy at Saint Mary's University
The Modernization of Buddhism in Global Perspective John Harding Victor Hori at McGill University and Alexander Soucy at Saint Mary's University SSHRC Insight $258,659


Previous Research

​Title ​Grant Agency ​Completion Date
​CREDO (Community of Research Excellence Development Opportunities): Buddhist Developments of the Western Frontier ​University of Lethbridge Research Fund, $17, 300, August 2009 - July 2011. ​Jan 2012
​Cultural Responses to Contested Claims of Sacred Place: Case Study of Pilgrimage Sites in Shikoku, Japan ​University of Lethbridge Research Fund ($8, 500) ​2005

Publications

Hillary P. Rodrigues and John S. Harding, Introduction to the Study of Religion, 2nd ed. (NY & London: Routledge, 2024).

John S. Harding, Victor Sōgen Hori, and Alexander Soucy, co-edited special issue of the Journal of Global Buddhism entitled "Alternate Buddhist Modernities." DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.4030971 www.globalbuddhism.org

John S. Harding, Victor Sōgen Hori, and Alexander Soucy, eds. Buddhism in the Global Eye: Beyond East and West (Bloomsbury Academic, 2020).

John S. Harding, "Mapping Buddhism beyond East and West," chapter in Harding, Hori, and Soucy, eds., Buddhism in the Global Eye: Beyond East and West (Bloomsbury Academic, 2020).

John S. Harding, Victor Sōgen Hori, and Alexander Soucy, "Introduction," chapter in Harding, Hori, and Soucy, eds., Buddhism in the Global Eye: Beyond East and West (Bloomsbury Academic, 2020).

John S. Harding, "Trailblazers of Global Buddhist Networks," Contemporary Buddhism 17:2 (2016), http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14639947.2016.1205764

John S. Harding, Victor Sōgen Hori, and Alexander Soucy, Flowers on the Rock: Global and Local Buddhisms in Canada (Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press, 2014).

John Harding, "Poets and Pilgrims: From Saigyō to Shikoku," chapter in Hans-Georg Moeller and Andrew Whitehead, eds., Landscape and Travelling East and West: A Philosophical Journey (London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2014).

John S. Harding and Hillary P. Rodrigues, The Study of Religion: A Reader (London: Routledge, 2013).

John Harding, "Secularization and Study of Religion at North American Universities," Ethique, Politique, Religions 1:2 (2013): 163-182.

John S. Harding, Victor Sōgen Hori, and Alexander Soucy, "Buddhism in Canada" chapter in Oliver Abenayaka and Asanga Tilakaratne, eds., 2600 Years of Sambuddhatva: Global Journey of Awakening (The Ministry of Buddhasasana and Religious Affairs, Government of Sri Lanka, 2012).

John S. Harding, Studying Buddhism in Practice (London: Routledge, 2012).

John S. Harding, Victor Sōgen Hori, and Alexander Soucy, Wild Geese: Buddhism in Canada (Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press, 2010).

Hillary P. Rodrigues and John S. Harding, Introduction to the Study of Religion (London: Routledge, 2009).

John Harding, Mahayana Phoenix: Japan's Buddhists at the 1893 World's Parliament of Religions (NY: Peter Lang, 2008).

John S. Harding, "Bodily crisis and religious conviction: Implications of Kiyozawa Manshi's illness," Studies in Religion/Sciences Religieuses 37/2 (2008): 211-233.

John Harding, "Expanding Notions of Buddhism: Influences Beyond Meiji Japan,"
Pacific World Journal, Third Series Number 9, Fall 2007, Special Issue: Essays Celebrating the Twentieth Anniversary of the Numata Chair in Buddhist Studies at the University of Calgary; full issue available at http://www.shin-ibs.edu/academics/_pwj/three.nine.php

John Harding, "Japanese Religions" in Robinson and Rodrigues, World Religions: a guide to the essentials (Peabody, Mass.: Hendrickson Publishers, 2006).

John Harding, "D.T. Suzuki's Pervasive Influence," Matsugaoka Bunka Annual Bulletin, Spring 2006 (also published in Japanese in the same 2006 issue).

Degrees

BA (Major: Asia Studies, Minor: Religion), University of Puget Sound; PhD (Religious Studies), University of Pennsylvania

Research Interests

Primary areas of interest include Japanese Buddhism and the cross-cultural exchange between Asia and the West that has shaped the development of modern Buddhism worldwide in the past century and a half. This has included research on Buddhism in Canada, such as Jodo Shinshu in southern Alberta, as well as research in Asia, Europe, and the United States.

Secondary areas of interest include Scholarly Approaches to the Study and Teaching of Religion (see sastor.com) as well as the co-authored (both with Hillary Rodrigues) Introduction to the Study of Religion (Routledge 2009, 2nd Edition 2024) and The Study of Religion: A Reader (2013).

Recent projects include: guest edited special issue of the Journal of Global Buddhism Vol.21 (2020) focused on "Alternate Buddhist Modernities"; editing the volume, Studying Buddhism in Practice (2012), for a new Routledge series, Studying Religions in Practice (Hillary Rodrigues, series editor); and serving as one of the authors and one of three editors (with Victor Sogen Hori and Alexander Soucy) for Buddhism in the Global Eye: Beyond East and West (Bloomsbury Academic, 2020), Flowers on the Rock: Global and Local Buddhisms in Canada (McGill-Queens University Press in 2014), and Wild Geese: Studies of Buddhism in Canada (MQUP, 2010). The 2014-2020 publications arose in connection with our collaborative SSHRC research project, "The Modernization of Buddhism in Global Perspective."

Research Areas


Buddhism in Meiji Japan
Buddhism in Canada
Global development of modern Buddhism in the past century and a half

Expertise

Theory and method in the study of religion
Buddhism in the West
East Asian religions (particularly Japanese Buddhism)