New Books Network

Natasha Heller, "Literature for Little Bodhisattvas: Making Buddhist Families in Modern Taiwan" (U Hawai'i Press, 2025)

Jan 26, 2026
Natasha Heller, associate professor in Religious Studies and scholar of Chinese Buddhism. She explores how Taiwanese picturebooks have become a new Buddhist genre and family-based sites of religious education. Short readings show how classic sutras, playful monk figures, cute buddhas, and civic-themed books teach children. The discussion highlights storytelling, visual pedagogy, and home-centered Buddhist formation.
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ANECDOTE

Book Project Began In A Bookstore

  • Natasha Heller discovered Buddhist children's books while browsing a Dharma Drum bookstore during a conference break.
  • That moment sparked a research project that expanded from an article into a full book due to the richness of the material.
INSIGHT

Three Forces Shaped Buddhist Picturebooks

  • Heller identifies three converging developments: postwar humanistic Buddhism, smaller urban families, and a robust Taiwanese picture-book culture.
  • These forces together made children a new, prime audience for Buddhist education.
INSIGHT

Stories And Images As Scripture Commentary

  • Heller shows that Xìngyún adapts the dense Heart Sutra for kids by surrounding it with stories and visual metaphors.
  • Illustrations (e.g., waves) and fables (Aesop's dog) function as commentary that preps children for later encounters with scripture.
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