The Legacy of Robert Morrell
The Morrell Memorial Lecture in Asian Religions commemorates the work of the late Professor Emeritus Robert E. Morrell, a specialist in Japanese literature and Buddhism who taught at Washington University for 34 years and who holds special significance for the campus, as Morrell was the first to teach a course on Buddhism. This annual series commemorates his life work by bringing distinguished scholars of Asian religions to campus.
An authority on Buddhist thought in classical Japanese literature, Morrell was author of Early Kamakura Buddhism: A Minority Report (1987), which focused on smaller and frequently overlooked Buddhist sects of the Kamakura period; and Sand and Pebbles: The Tales of Muju Ichien, A Voice for Pluralism in Kamakura Buddhism (1985), the first complete English rendering of Muju’s “Shasekishu” parables. To learn more about Morrell's life and work, read his obituary.
2022-2023 Morrell Memorial Lecture
Turning Ghosts into People: Religion & Gender Politics in the Chinese Communist Revolution
Friday, October 21, 2022
IN-PERSON; LOCATION TBADETAILS: Click here
2021-2022 Morrell Memorial Lecture
Gods and Things in Four Asian Places
Thursday, November 11, 2021
Time: 6:00 pm
Prof. Laurel Kendall
Curator of Asian Ethnographic Collections at the American Museum of Natural History
and Senior Research Scholar at the Weatherhead East Asian Institute at Columbia University