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This book focuses on genealogies of religious authority in South
Asia, examining the figure of the guru in narrative texts,
polemical tracts, hagiographies, histories, in contemporary
devotional communities, New Age spiritual movements and global guru
organizations. Experts in the field present reflections on
historically specific contexts in which a guru comes into being,
becomes part of a community, is venerated, challenged or
repudiated, generates a new canon, remains unique with no clear
succession or establishes a succession in which charisma is
routinized. The guru emerges and is sustained and routinized from
the nexus of guruship, narratives, performances and community. The
contributors to the book examine this nexus at specific historical
moments with all their elements of change and contingency. The book
will be of interest to scholars in the field of South Asian
studies, the study of religions and cultural studies.
Filling the most glaring gap in Shrivaishnava scholarship, this
book deals with the history of interpretation of a theological
concept of self-surrender-prapatti in late twelfth and thirteenth
century religious texts of the Shrivaishnava community of South
India. This original study shows that medieval sectarian formation
in its theological dimension is a fluid and ambivalent enterprise,
where conflict and differentiation are presaged on sharing, whether
of a common canon, saint or rituals or two languages (Tamil and
Sanskrit), or of a meta-social arena such as the temple.
Srilata Mueller, a member of the Shrivaishnava community, argues
that the core ideas of prapatti in these religious texts reveal the
description of a heterogeneous theological concept. Demonstrating
that this concept is theologically moulded by the emergence of new
literary genres, Mueller puts forward the idea that this original
understanding of prapatti is a major contributory cause to the
emergence of sectarian divisions among the Shrivaishnavas, which
lead to the formation of two sub-sects, the Tenkalai and the
Vatakalia, who stand respectively, for the cat and monkey
theological positions.
Making an important contribution to contemporary Indian and Hindu
thinking on religion, this text provides a new intellectual history
of medieval Indian religion. It will be of particular interest to
scholars of Shrivaishnava and also Hindu and Indian religious
studies.
This book deals with the history of interpretation of a theological
concept of self-surrender - prapatti - in late 12th - 13th century
religious texts of the Shrivaishnava community of South India. It
is a unique textual study, which shows that medieval sectarian
formation in its theological dimension is a fluid and ambivalent
enterprise, where conflict and differentiation are presaged on
"sharing," whether of a common canon, or two languages (Tamil and
Sanskrit), a common saint, a common corpus of rituals or of a
"meta-social" arena such as the temple itself.
Arguing that the core ideas of prapatti in these texts reveal the
description of a heterogeneous theological concept, its nature
dependent on the status of its practitioner, this book demonstrates
that this concept is theologically moulded by the emergence of new
literary genres, such as commentaries with hagiographical elements,
in this period. The author puts forward the idea that this original
heterogeneous understanding of prapatti is a majorcontributory
cause to the emergence of sectarian divisions among the
Shrivaishnavas, which lead to the eventual formation of two
sub-sects, the Tenkalai and the Vatakalai, who stand respectively,
for the "cat" and "monkey" theological positions.
The book contributes to a new, intellectual history of medieval
Indian religion with a specific emphasis on South Indian
Shrivaishnavism. It will be of interest to scholars of
Shrivaishnavism and Hindu and Indian Religious Studies.
This book analyses the religious ideology of a Tamil reformer and
saint, Ramalinga Swamigal of the 19th century and his posthumous
reception in the Tamil country and sheds light on the
transformation of Tamil religion that both his works and the
understanding of him brought about. The book traces the
hagiographical and biographical process by which Ramalinga Swamigal
is shifted from being considered an exemplary poet-saint of the
Tamil Saivite bhakti tradition to a Dravidian nationalist social
reformer. Taking as a starting point Ramalinga's own writing, the
book presents him as inhabiting a border zone between early
modernity and modernity, between Hinduism and Christianity, between
colonialism and regional nationalism, highlighting the influence of
his teachings on politics, particularly within Dravidian cultural
and political nationalism. Simultaneously, the book considers the
implication of such an hagiographical process for the
transformation of Tamil religion in the period between the 19th
-mid-20th centuries. The author demonstrates that Ramalinga
Swamigal's ideology of compassion, civakarunyam, had not only a
long genealogy in pre-modern Tamil Saivism but also that it
functioned as a potentially emancipatory ethics of salvation and
caste critique not just for him but also for other Tamil and Dalit
intellectuals of the 19th century. This book is a path-breaking
study that also traces the common grounds between the religious
visions of two of the most prominent subaltern figures of Tamil
modernity - Iyothee Thass and Ramalingar. It argues that these
transformations are one meaningful way for a religious tradition to
cope with and come to terms with the implications of
historicization and the demands of colonial modernity. It is,
therefore, a valuable contribution to the field of religion, South
Asian history and literature and Subaltern studies. The Open Access
version of this book, available at
http://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/e/9781315794518 has been made
available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No
Derivatives 4.0 license.
Academic study of the tantric traditions has blossomed in recent
decades, in no small measure thanks to the magisterial
contributions of Alexis G. J. S. Sanderson, until 2015 Spalding
Professor of Eastern Religions and Ethics at Oxford University.
This collection of essays honours him and touches several fields of
Indology that he has helped to shape (or, in the case of the Saiva
religions, revolutionised): the history, ritual, and philosophies
of tantric Buddhism, Saivism and Vaisnavism; religious art and
architecture; and Sanskrit belles lettres. Grateful former
students, joined by other experts influenced by his scholarship,
here offer papers that make significant contributions to our
understanding of the cultural, religious, political, and
intellectual histories of premodern South and Southeast Asia.
Contributors are: Peter Bisschop, Judit Toerzsoek, Alex Watson,
Isabelle Ratie, Christopher Wallis, Peter-Daniel Szanto, Srilata
Raman, Csaba Dezso, Gergely Hidas, Nina Mirnig, John Nemec, Bihani
Sarkar, Jurgen Hanneder, Diwakar Acharya, James Mallinson, Csaba
Kiss, Jason Birch, Elizabeth Mills, Ryugen Tanemura, Anthony Tribe,
and Parul Dave-Mukherji.
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