Bibliographic Information

Pūjā and saṃskāra

Musashi Tachikawa, Shoun Hino, Lalita Deodhar

Motilal Banarsidass, 2001

1st ed

Available at  / 13 libraries

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Note

Pt. 1 is a revised version of Tachikawa's paper entitled "A Hindu worship service in sixteen steps, Shoḍaśa-upacāra-pūjā," Bulletin of the National Museum of Ethnology, v. 8 no. 1, Mar. 1983

Bibliography: p. [175]-177

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book treats two representative Hindu rituals of contemporary India, Puja (offering service) and Samskara rites are performed at significant junctures of an individual's life, from birth to death, by the individual's family. Puja rites, rather than being performed in relation to the life cycle of an individual in a family, are more deeply related to the annual rituals of the cult to which an individual or the person's family belongs. Persons may go to a temple and request priests to perform Puja rites, or they may perform them themselves at home. This book presents a large number of photographs so that readers are able to gain an accurate grasp of them. And let us say that this is intended not merely to introduce Puja and Samskara rituals, but to indicate the place of ritual in the total structure of religion.

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