Since the 1960s, yoga has become a billion-dollar industry in
the West, attracting housewives and hipsters, New Agers and the
old-aged. But our modern conception of yoga derives much from
nineteenth-century European spirituality, and the true story of
yoga's origins in South Asia is far richer, stranger, and more
entertaining than most of us realize.
To uncover this history, David Gordon White focuses on yoga's
practitioners. Combing through millennia of South Asia's vast and
diverse literature, he discovers that yogis are usually portrayed
as wonder-workers or sorcerers who use their dangerous supernatural
abilities--which can include raising the dead, possession, and
levitation--to acquire power, wealth, and sexual gratification. As
White shows, even those yogis who aren't downright villainous bear
little resemblance to Western assumptions about them. At turns
rollicking and sophisticated, "Sinister Yogis" tears down the image
of yogis as detached, contemplative teachers, finally placing them
in their proper context.
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