Stuart Ray Sarbacker

Something went wrong. Please try your request again later.
Follow to get new release updates and improved recommendations
OK
About Stuart Ray Sarbacker
Stuart Ray Sarbacker is an Associate Professor of the Comparative Study of Religion with a focus on Indic religion and philosophy at Oregon State University. His work is centered on the relationships between the religious and philosophical traditions of Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism, especially with respect to the practices of yoga and tantra (both bodily disciplines and contemplative practices). He also works on issues related to method and theory in the study of religion, with a particular focus on religious experience and its interpretation. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and has performed institutional study and fieldwork in India, Nepal, and Japan. Before coming to Oregon State University, he served as a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Religion at Northwestern University, where he received the Weinberg College of Liberal Arts Alumni Teaching Award for his distinguished teaching of undergraduate students.
At Oregon State, Professor Sarbacker was awarded the Bill and Caroline Wilkins Faculty Development Award in support of his innovative teaching and research, and he has served as a Fellow of both the Center for the Humanities and the Spring Creek Project. His research and teaching has been also been supported by the Hundere Endowment for Religion and Culture and by the Horning Endowment for the Humanities and Sciences. He is currently participating in a 3-year Luce Foundation funded program on religion and technology that is being administered by the Institute for Buddhist Studies in Berkeley, California. His project focuses on the ways in which the philosophical and ethical issues associated with self-transformation in Indian contemplative traditions mirror those arising from emergent technologies of human augmentation.
His teaching focuses on topical issues in Comparative Religion and Indian Philosophy, along with broad introductory courses on World Religions, Hinduism, Buddhism, and Islam. He offers a range of courses on the religions, philosophies, and cultures of South Asia, and on topics relating to spirituality and ecology and religion and technology. In many of his courses, Sarbacker utilizes innovative contemplative pedagogies that aim at bridging the gaps between academic study, self-reflection, and engagement in civic life.
Professor Sarbacker has worked with a variety of students on graduate-level research, including in Applied Ethics, Environmental Humanities, and Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies. He has also served as a member of the Alternative Masculinities Seminar sponsored by the Center for the Humanities at Oregon State.
He is a co-founder and former co-chair of the American Academy of Religion's Yoga in Theory and Practice section, and has also served as the co-chair of the American Academy of Religion's Mysticism section.
In addition to his academic credentials, Professor Sarbacker is an active yoga practitioner and teacher, having trained extensively in contemporary yoga and meditation traditions in India and the United States.
At Oregon State, Professor Sarbacker was awarded the Bill and Caroline Wilkins Faculty Development Award in support of his innovative teaching and research, and he has served as a Fellow of both the Center for the Humanities and the Spring Creek Project. His research and teaching has been also been supported by the Hundere Endowment for Religion and Culture and by the Horning Endowment for the Humanities and Sciences. He is currently participating in a 3-year Luce Foundation funded program on religion and technology that is being administered by the Institute for Buddhist Studies in Berkeley, California. His project focuses on the ways in which the philosophical and ethical issues associated with self-transformation in Indian contemplative traditions mirror those arising from emergent technologies of human augmentation.
His teaching focuses on topical issues in Comparative Religion and Indian Philosophy, along with broad introductory courses on World Religions, Hinduism, Buddhism, and Islam. He offers a range of courses on the religions, philosophies, and cultures of South Asia, and on topics relating to spirituality and ecology and religion and technology. In many of his courses, Sarbacker utilizes innovative contemplative pedagogies that aim at bridging the gaps between academic study, self-reflection, and engagement in civic life.
Professor Sarbacker has worked with a variety of students on graduate-level research, including in Applied Ethics, Environmental Humanities, and Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies. He has also served as a member of the Alternative Masculinities Seminar sponsored by the Center for the Humanities at Oregon State.
He is a co-founder and former co-chair of the American Academy of Religion's Yoga in Theory and Practice section, and has also served as the co-chair of the American Academy of Religion's Mysticism section.
In addition to his academic credentials, Professor Sarbacker is an active yoga practitioner and teacher, having trained extensively in contemporary yoga and meditation traditions in India and the United States.
Customers Also Bought Items By
Are you an author?
Help us improve our Author Pages by updating your bibliography and submitting a new or current image and biography.
1 11 1
Author Updates
Titles By Stuart Ray Sarbacker
Tracing the Path of Yoga
Jul 2, 2021
$27.95
This title has not yet been released.
More Buying Choices
$27.95
(2 Used & New offers)
Samadhi: The Numinous and Cessative in Indo-Tibetan Yoga (SUNY Series in Religious Studies)
Jun 1, 2006
$32.95
More Buying Choices
$24.00
(10 Used & New offers)
More Information
Anything else? Provide feedback about this page