A professional headshot of Sara Ann Swenson

Sara Ann Swenson

Assistant Professor

Appointments

Assistant Professor, Religion

Affiliated Faculty, Asian Societies, Cultures, and Languages

Area of Expertise

Religions of Southeast Asia,

Buddhism,

Vietnam Studies,

Ethnography,

Gender and Sexuality,

Affect Theory

Biography

Buddhist volunteerism is on the rise across Asia. In Vietnam's fastest growing urban area, Ho Chi Minh City, religious charities fulfill humanitarian needs by subsidizing medicine, serving free meals, and fundraising for infrastructure. Many of these charities are informal and unofficial. Volunteers gather in home kitchens; give aid on street corners; and fundraise for projects over social media. Through these small-scale local efforts, Buddhist communities are shaping new futures for social service provisioning amid national policy shifts toward increasing economic privatization in Vietnam.

As a researcher, I pursue projects that highlight the power and agency of everyday people. Religions are often a vital resource for grassroots social action and community engagement, as exemplified by Buddhism in Vietnam. My classes encourage students to investigate similar questions about religion in contemporary societies. We examine intersections among politics, economics, gender, sexuality, race, class, and religion in Southeast Asia and around the world. Through both teaching and research, I pursue the question: "How do people care for others?"

My projects have received generous grant support from the American Council of Learned Societies; Charlotte W. Newcombe Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship; Fulbright-Hays Doctoral Dissertation Research Abroad (DDRA); and The Robert H. N. Ho Family Foundation Dissertation Fellowship in Buddhist Studies.

I completed my Ph.D. in Religion from Syracuse University in 2021. I also hold an M.Phil. in Religion (Syracuse University, 2016), a Certificate of Advanced Study in Women's and Gender Studies (Syracuse University, 2015), an M.A. in Comparative Religion (Iliff School of Theology, 2012), and a B.A. in English (University of Minnesota Duluth, 2009). My book Near Light We Shine: Buddhist Charity in Urban Vietnam (2025) is available from Oxford University Press.

Education

B.A. University of Minnesota-Duluth

M.A. Iliff School of Theology

M.Phil. Syracuse University

Ph.D. Syracuse University

Publications

2025. Near Light We Shine: Buddhist Charity in Urban Vietnam (Oxford University Press).

2025. "Thich Nhat Hanh: A Mission of Mindfulness," in Figures of Buddhist Diplomacy in Modern Asia, edited by Jack Meng-Tat Chia (London: Bloomsbury Academic).

2024. "The Merit of Meat: Karma as Social Fact among Buddhist Food Charities in Vietnam." Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus 22 (7): 5829.

2024. "The Life and Legacies of Thích Nhất Hạnh." Journal of Vietnamese Studies 19 (1): 1–8.

2024. "Religion, Food Charity, and Care in Vietnam." Co-authored with Le Hoang Anh Thu. Introduction to a Special Issue of Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus 22 (4): 5826.

2023. "Buddhist Moral Emotions." Co-authored with Jessica Starling. Introduction to a Special Issue of Journal of Religious Ethics 51 (4): 691–700.

2023. "An Uncouth Monk: The Moral Aesthetics of Buddhist Para-Charisma." Journal of Religious Ethics 51 (4): 761–781.

2022. "'Three Trees Make a Mountain': Women and Contramodern Buddhist Volunteerism in Vietnam." Asian Ethnology 81 (1–2): 3–22.

2021. "The Political Spirituality of Buddhist Volunteerism in Contemporary Vietnam." Political Theology 22 (1): 68–74.

2020. "The Affective Politics of Karma among Buddhist Cancer Charities in Vietnam." Journal of Vietnamese Studies 15 (4): 33–62.

2020. "Following Feeling: Karma and the Senses in Buddhist Nuns' Ordination Narratives." Journal of Global Buddhism 21: 71–86.

2020. "Compassion without pity: Buddhist dana as charity, humanitarianism, and altruism." Religion Compass 14 (9): 1–10.

2018. "Mixed-Reality: Social Media as Ethnographic Method." Journal of Theta Alpha Kappa National Honor Society for Religious Studies and Theology 42 (1): 1–15.

2017. "Religious Wonderlands: Eros, Madness, and Ethics in Religious Studies through the work of Lynne Huffer." Journal of Theology & Sexuality 22 (3): 133–142.

Contact

Sara.A.Swenson@dartmouth.edu
Thornton, Room 211
HB 6036

Departments

Religion

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