Bryan J. Cuevas

Bryan J. Cuevas (born 1967) is an American Tibetologist and historian of religion. He is the John F. Priest Professor of Religion and Director of Buddhist and Tibetan Studies at Florida State University, where he specializes in Tibetan Buddhist history, literature, and culture.[1]

Education

Cuevas was born in Atlanta, Georgia.[2] He was educated at Emory University, receiving a B.A. in Philosophy in 1989,[3] and at the University of Virginia, an M.A. in History of Religions and Buddhist Studies in 1993, and his doctorate in Buddhist and Tibetan Studies in 2000.[4]

Academic Career

Cuevas has been a Member of the Institute For Advanced Study[5] and has held visiting appointments at the University of California, Berkeley[6] and Princeton University. He currently serves on the editorial board of the Journal of the American Academy of Religion and has been book review editor for the Journal of the International Association of Tibetan Studies. Cuevas's research focuses on Tibetan history and historiography, hagiography and biographical literature, Buddhist popular religion, the social history of death and death-related practices, and the politics of magic and ritual power in premodern Tibetan societies, from roughly the eleventh through the early eighteenth centuries.[7] His work has received fellowship support from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Center for the Study of Religion at Princeton University, and the American Institute of Indian Studies.

Books Published

References

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