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Exploring religious traditions in all of their complexity

Religious Studies Program

We explore religious traditions through comparative, contextual and thematic studies. Our courses are built on the established scholarly tradition of the study of religion as an academic, as opposed to a confessional, pursuit.

Religious Studies Events

Sep 30
Tuesday

Book Talk with Dr. Brendan Galipeau

Tuesday, Sep, 30 - 04:45 PM

Rockefeller Hall 374

This is a inperson event.

Event speaker

Brendan Galipeau

Binghampton University

Description

"Catholic and Buddhist Ecologies in Tibetan Wine Production in Southwest China"

Brendan A. Galipeau
Lecturer
Environmental Studies Program
Binghamton University

Drawing from material in my recently published book, Crafting a Tibetan Terroir, this talk discusses the historical Catholic roots and modern Buddhist environmental responses to viticulture in Tibetan Southwest China. Vineyards were first introduced to this region by nineteenth-century French and Swiss Catholic missionaries to make sacramental wine, a tradition continued and expanded upon today by Catholic households today. These developments have formed in response to twenty-first century commercialization of the region for tourism, and a desire among Catholic families to differentiate themselves within the wider landscape of wine across Northwest Yunnan Province. Here Tibetan agropastoral livelihoods have been transformed by monocropping vineyards for state supported wineries. Catholic families have resisted these commercialization efforts and instead produce their own wines identified with French history and Catholic ritual. In neighboring Buddhist communities, a majority of households have welcomed state capitalism and viticulture and the new economic opportunities they bring. However, select active Buddhist environmentalists are agitating against these new economies in response to increasing use of agrochemicals and pollution. These reactions are largely driven by perceived degradation of sacred landscapes and failing devotion to mountain deities, observed through changes in the landscape such as glacier retreat. 

Brendan A. Galipeau is a Lecturer in Environmental Studies at Binghamton University. He previously served as Assistant Professor of Anthropology at National Tsing Hua University in Taiwan from 2019 to 2024 and as a postdoctoral fellow in Transnational Asian Studies at Rice University from 2017 to 2019. He received his PhD in Anthropology from the University of Hawai‘i at Manoa in 2017 and MA in Applied Anthropology at Oregon State University in 2012.

Galipeau has lived in and been conducting research in Tibetan Southwest China for almost two decades since 2007. His research and publications broadly focus on environmental change and human relations with nature in Southwest China and Taiwan, with a particular focus on agrarian change, hydropower resettlement, and religious ecologies. His work and publications have been featured in a variety of publications and media including Made in China, Journal of Agrarian Change, Human Ecology, Culture, Agriculture, Food, and Environment, National Public Radio, and the web publication The Third Pole. Crafting a Tibetan Terroir published by the University of Washington Press in 2024 is his first book. 

Sponsored: Religious Studies Program

Co-sponsors: East Asia Program, Department of Asian Studies

Event access

public

Contact information

For more information contact Chiara Formichi

Engage & Support

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Major in religious studies

Interested in a specific religious tradition? Want to learn more about religious rituals throughout history and in the contemporary world? Consider an undergraduate major or minor in religious studies!

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Take a class

Start with "Religion and Ecological Sustainability" (RELST 2273) or "Sensational Religion" (RELST 2276) or take one of the many other classes we offer.

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Add a graduate minor in religious studies 

Cornell graduate students working in fields related to the study of religion are welcome to apply for the Religious Studies Graduate Minor in the Cornell Graduate School

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Support religious studies at Cornell

Your support enables the program to enhance the experience for undergraduate students. Gifts can help fund lectures and conferences, student research, distinguished speakers, and other program priorities. We will greatly appreciate and immediately put into use any gift, no matter the amount.

Give to Religious Studies

Undergraduate Funding

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Weiner Family Summer Fellowship

This fellowship is given in honor of Gelek Rimpoche. It supports funding for summer experiential learning and research for a Cornell undergraduate student studying Buddhist practice in Asia. Funding is limited to travel, research materials, and living expenses. Preference will be given to a student with strong coursework in religious studies and Asian religions.

For more information contact the Director of Religious Studies.

Application deadline for Summer 2026 is March 16, 2026.

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