1st Edition

Studying Hinduism Key Concepts and Methods

Edited By Sushil Mittal, Gene Thursby Copyright 2008
    424 Pages
    by Routledge

    424 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book is an indispensable resource for students and researchers wishing to develop a deeper understanding of one of the world's oldest and most multifaceted religious traditions.

    Sushil Mittal and Gene Thursby, leading scholars in the field, have brought together a rich variety of perspectives which reflect the current lively state of the field. Studying Hinduism is the result of cooperative work by accomplished specialists in several fields that include anthropology, art, comparative literature, history, philosophy, religious studies, and sociology. Through these complementary and exciting approaches, students will gain a greater understanding of India's culture and traditions, to which Hinduism is integral. The book uses key critical terms and topics as points of entry into the subject, revealing that although Hinduism can be interpreted in sharply contrasting ways and set in widely varying contexts, it is endlessly fascinating and intriguing.

    Introduction. Art.  Body.  Cinema.  Cognitive Science.  Colonialism.  Diaspora.  Ecology.  Ethnography.  Ethnosociology.  Exchange.  Experience.  Fiction.  Gender.  Intellect.  Kinship.  Law.  Memory.  Myth.  Nationalism.  Orientalism.  Postcolonialism.  Psychoanalysis.  Ritual.  Romanticism.  Sacred.  Stratification.  Structuralism.  Subaltern

    Biography

    Sushil Mittal is an Associate Professor and the director of the Mahatma Gandhi Center for Global Nonviolence at James Madison University in Virginia. Gene Thursby is an Associate Professor at the University of Florida. Together they have co-edited Religions of South Asia (2006), and The Hindu World  (2004) also published by Routledge.

    'I will begin my review of this book by recommending that every scholar of Hinduism read it. I do not state this merely as a generic form of praise, but to draw attention to the fact that any teacher or researcher of Hindu traditions, whatever his or her methodological perspective, has much to gain by carefully reading through each of its 28 chapters. This is because the raison d’eˆtre of the volume is to survey current issues and methods of religious studies research by favoring a breadth and diversity of approaches as they are manifest within scholarship on the Hindu tradition. As such, most readers of this book may expect to find in it a remedy for the regrettable (but unavoidable) myopia that naturally results from specialization. Hindu scholars desiring to ease the nagging feeling that they are out of touch with research models other than their own (here I speak from experience) could hardly ask for a better collection of essays.'

    - Christopher R. Austin, McMaster University, Canada