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The book attends to a historical question - how to account for the
high numbers of renouncers (sadhvis) mentioned in medieval and
ancient texts - which has been acknowledged and raised, but left
unaddressed within Jain studies. It does so through ethnographic
data gathered through extensive fieldwork among the sadhvis in
Delhi and Jaipur. The volume foregrounds the primacy of 'choice'
and 'agency'- upheld by the nuns themselves, who associate
asceticism with autonomy, freedom, joy, spiritual well-being,
self-worth and peace, and grihastha (household) with loss of
independence, fettered existence, degradation, burdensome familial
obligations and social responsibilities. It also examines whether
it may be apt to term Jain nuns as practitioners of an 'indigenous
mode of feminism'. The book challenges the existing sociological
theories of renunciation and tests the feminist concepts of agency
and autonomy by investigating the culturally coded roles ascribed
to women in Jainism, which are variegated, and examines how a
fractured discourse and reality is resolved in the subjectivities
and identities of female ascetics. The very legitimacy of the
institution of female asceticism, and the way in which the society
(samaj) upholds and sustains it, renders female asceticism into a
socially approved alternative institution - albeit one that allows
Jain nuns to create spaces of relative and autonomy and even
prestige for themselves.
The entanglement of law and religion is reiterated on a daily basis
in India. Communities and groups turn to the courts to seek
positive recognition of their religious identities or sentiments,
as well as a validation of their practices. Equally, courts have
become the most potent site of the play of conflicts and
contradictions between religious groups. The judicial power thus
not only arbiters conflicts but also defines what constitutes the
'religious', and demarcates its limits. This volume argues that the
relationship between law and religion is not merely one of
competing sovereignties - as rational law moulding religion in its
reformist vision, and religion defending its turf against secular
incursions- but needs to be understood within a wider social and
political canvas. The essays here demonstrate how questions of
religious pluralism, secularism, law and order, are all central to
understanding how the religious and the legal remain imbricated
within each other in modern India. It will be of interest to
academics, researchers, and advanced students of Sociology,
History, Political Science and Law. The chapters in this book were
originally published as a special issue of South Asian History and
Culture.
The book attends to a historical question - how to account for the
high numbers of renouncers (sadhvis) mentioned in medieval and
ancient texts - which has been acknowledged and raised, but left
unaddressed within Jain studies. It does so through ethnographic
data gathered through extensive fieldwork among the sadhvis in
Delhi and Jaipur. The volume foregrounds the primacy of 'choice'
and 'agency'- upheld by the nuns themselves, who associate
asceticism with autonomy, freedom, joy, spiritual well-being,
self-worth and peace, and grihastha (household) with loss of
independence, fettered existence, degradation, burdensome familial
obligations and social responsibilities. It also examines whether
it may be apt to term Jain nuns as practitioners of an 'indigenous
mode of feminism'. The book challenges the existing sociological
theories of renunciation and tests the feminist concepts of agency
and autonomy by investigating the culturally coded roles ascribed
to women in Jainism, which are variegated, and examines how a
fractured discourse and reality is resolved in the subjectivities
and identities of female ascetics. The very legitimacy of the
institution of female asceticism, and the way in which the society
(samaj) upholds and sustains it, renders female asceticism into a
socially approved alternative institution - albeit one that allows
Jain nuns to create spaces of relative and autonomy and even
prestige for themselves.
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