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Explores the manner in which people of various caste and various
religions responded to the Lutherian mission and congregation. The
text investigates the manner in which Tamils themselves understood
the Evangelical religion as they spread it beyond Tranquebar. It
then turns to the early career of Vedanayagam Sastri (1774-1864).
It considers how he responded to efforts by "new missionaries" to
change the language, liturgy and social custom that had guided
Tamil Protestants for over a hundred years. Reflections on the
intellectual impact of colonial Europe on those early Protestant
Christians of India conclude the study.
This book is the crowning achievement of the remarkable scholar D.
Dennis Hudson, bringing together the results of a lifetime of
interdisciplinary study of south Indian Hinduism.
The book is a finely detailed examination of a virtually unstudied
Tamil Hindu temple, the Vaikuntha Perumal (ca. 770 C.E.). Hudson
offers a sustained reading of the temple as a coherent, organized,
minutely conceptualized mandala. Its iconography and structure can
be understood in the light of a ten-stanza poem by the Alvar poet
Tirumangai, and of the Bhagavata Purana and other major religious
texts, even as it in turn illuminates the meanings of those texts.
Hudson takes the reader step by step on a tour of the temple,
telling the stories suggested by each of the 56 sculpted panels and
showing how their relationship to one another brings out layers of
meaning. He correlates the stories with stages in the spiritual
growth of the king through the complex rituals that formed a
crucial dimension of the religion. The result is a tapestry of
interpretation that brings to life the richness of spiritual
understanding embodied in the temple.
Hudson's underlying assumption is that the temple itself
constitutes a summa theologica for the Pancharatra doctrines in the
Bhagavata tradition centered on Krishna as it had developed through
the eighth century. This tradition was already ancient and had
spread widely across South Asia and into Southeast Asia. By
interweaving history with artistic, liturgical, and textual
interpretation, Hudson makes a remarkable contribution to our
understanding of an Indian religious and cultural tradition.
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