›Religion in Austria‹ provides detailed expert accounts of various aspects of Austrian religious history and related topics, past and present. Based on original scholarship, the series takes a study of religions perspective on the vast and largely unexplored field of religion in Austria. | Alisha Saikia: Ball Jointed Dolls (BJDs) and the Creation of a Subjective Myth: A Case Study of Collectors in Austria | Joseph Chadwin: Religiously Affirming or Ignorantly Orientalist: An Ethnographic Study of Chinese Teenagers’ Experience of Buddhist Education in Austria | Lukas K. Pokorny and Christoph Hammer: The Dzogchen Community in Austria | Lukas K. Pokorny and Christoph Hammer: The History of the Karma Kagyu Tradition in Austria | Dirk Schuster: The Myth of Germanness as Part of the ›Völkisch‹ Movement: The Case of Krems | Dirk Schuster: The Necessity of Expanding the Methods of the Study of Religions: Illustrated by a Museum Collection from Austria | Samuel Thévoz: A Surfacing Manuscript amid a Cascade of Mysteries: “Tibet and Its Secrets,” Alexandra David-Neel’s Earliest Radio Talk (Recorded by Radio Wien, January 29, 1936) | Lukas K. Pokorny: “I Owe My Deeper Understanding of the Teaching Largely to Reading Your Writings”: An Annotated Translation of the Correspondence between Anton Kropatsch and Nyanaponika, 1953–1963 | Johannes Endler: Norbert Lauppert (1906–1991) and Theosophy in Twentieth-Century Austria