PART I: Between Tradition and Modernity.- Chapter 1. The Transformations of Mindfulness.- Chapter 2. The Challenge of Mindful Engagement.- Chapter 3. Paying Attention in a Digital Economy: Reflections on The Role of Analysis and Judgment Within Contemporary Discourses of Mindfulness and Comparisons with Classical Buddhist Accounts of Sati.- Chapter 4. Exploring the Full Range of Buddhist Meditative Practices: Moving Beyond One Size Fits All.- Chapter 5. Mindfulness: Traditional and Utilitarian.- Chapter 6. Can Secular Mindfulness be Separated from Religion?.- Chapter 7. The Mindful Self in Space Time.- PART II: Neoliberal Mindfulness vs. Critical Mindfulness.- Chapter 8. Selling Mindfulness: Commodity Lineages and the Marketing of Mindful Products.- Chapter 9. Mindfulness and the Moral Imperative for the Self to Improve the Self.- Chapter 10. The Critique of Mindfulness and the Mindfulness of Critique: Paying Attention with Foucault’s Analytic of Governmentality.- Chapter11. A Meta-Critique of Mindfulness Critiques: From McMindfulness to Critical Mindfulness.- Chapter 12. Notes Towards a Coming Backlash: Mindfulness as an Opiate of the Middle-Classes.- Chapter 13. Is There a Corporate Takeover of the Mindfulness Industry?.- Chapter 14. Corporate Mindfulness and the Pathologization of Workplace Stress.- Chapter 15. Mindfulness in the Working Life: In Search for New Spaces of Awareness and Equanimity.- PART III: Genealogies of Mindfulness-Based Interventions.- Chapter 16. Against One Method: Contemplation in Context.- Chapter 17. Mindfulness-Based Interventions: Clinical Psychology, Buddhadharma, or Both? A Wisdom Perspective.- Chapter 18. Mindfulness: The Bottled Water of the Psychotherapy Industry.- Chapter 19. The Fourth Treasure: Psychotherapy’s Contribution to the Dharma.- Chapter 20. Constructing the Mindful Subject: A Discourse Analysis of 'Inquiry' in Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction.- Chapter 21. Saving the World: Personalized Communication of Mindfulness Neuroscience.- Chapter 22. The Ultimate Rx: Cutting Through the Delusion of Self-Cherishing.- PART IV: Mindfulness as Critical Pedagogy.- Chapter 23. Critical Integral Contemplative Education.- Chapter 24. What is the Sound of One Invisible Hand Clapping?: Neoliberalism, the Invisibility of Asian and Asian American Buddhists, and Secular Mindfulness in Education.- Chapter 25. Looking Through a Glass Darkly: The Neglect of Ethical and Educational Elements in Mindfulness-Based Interventions.- Chapter 26. Education as the Practice of Freedom: A Social Justice Approach for Mindfulness Educators.- Chapter 27. The Curriculum of Right Mindfulness: The Relational Self and the Capacity for Compassion.- Chapter 28. Community-Engaged Mindfulness and Social Justice: An Inquiry and Call to Action.- Chapter 29. A Critical and Comprehensive Review of Mindfulness in the Early Years.- Chapter 30. A “Mechanism of Hope”: Mindfulness, Education and the Developing Brain.- Chapter 31. Using a Mindfulness-Oriented Academic Success Course toReduce Self-Limiting Social Stereotypes in a Higher Education Context.- PART V: Commentary.- Chapter 32. Meditation Matters: Replies to the Anti-McMindfulness Bandwagon.- Chapter 33. Criticism Matters: A Response to Rick Repetti.
Ronald E. Purser, Ph.D., is a Professor of Management at San
Francisco State University where he has taught the in the MBA and
undergraduate business programs, as well in the doctoral program in
the College of Education. Prior to his current appointment, he was
an Associate Professor of Organization Development at Loyola
University of Chicago. His recent research has been exploring the
challenges and issues of introducing mindfulness into secular
contexts, particularly critical perspectives of mindfulness in
corporate settings. Author and co-editor of five books, including
24/7: Time and Temporality in the Network Society (Stanford
University Press, 2007). He sits on the editorial board of the
Mindfulness journal, as well as the executive board of the
Consciousness, Mindfulness and Compassion (CMC) International
Association. A student and Buddhist practitioner since 1981, he was
recently ordained as a Dharma instructor in the Korean Zen Buddhist
Taego order. His article “Beyond McMindfulness” (with David Loy) in
the Huffington Post went viral in 2013.
David Forbes, Ph.D., (U.C. Berkeley), LMHC, is Associate
Professor in the School Counseling program in the School of
Education at Brooklyn College/CUNY and affiliate faculty in the
Urban Education doctoral program at the CUNY Graduate Center. He
was a co-recipient of a program grant from the Center for
Contemplative Mind in Society and wrote Boyz 2 Buddhas: Counseling
Urban High School Male Athletes in the Zone (Peter Lang, 2004)
about counseling and teaching mindfulness meditation to a Brooklyn
high school football team. Forbes teaches critical and
integral approaches to mindfulness. He writes on the social and
cultural context of mindfulness in education and wrote “Occupy
Mindfulness” and "Search Outside Yourself: Google Misses a Lesson
in Wisdom 101” with Ron Purser. He consults with schools in New
York on developing integral mindfulness programs and practices
meditation with a group from the New York Insight Meditation
Center.
Adam Burke, Ph.D., M.P.H., is a Professor in Health
Education and Director of the Institute for Holistic Health Studies
at San Francisco State University. He holds advanced degrees in the
social/behavioral sciences from UCLA and UC Santa Cruz, and is a
licensed acupuncturist, trained in San Francisco and Sichuan,
China. Meditation training and practice commenced in the 1970’s and
continues across diverse traditions. Research and publication
interests focus on student achievement and education equity,
meditation and imagery, and cross-cultural studies of traditional
health practices. Recent published works include Learning Life
(Rainor Media, 2016). He has served on the American Public Health
Association’s Governing Council, as chair of the California
Acupuncture Board, editor-in-chief of the American Acupuncturist,
and as an Advisory Council member of the NIH’s National Center for
Complementary and Integrative Health (NCCIH).
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