Notes from a Maṇḍala : essays in the history of Indian religions in honor of Wendy Doniger
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Bibliographic Information
Notes from a Maṇḍala : essays in the history of Indian religions in honor of Wendy Doniger
University of Delaware Press, c2010
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Notes from a Mandala
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 298-337) and index
Contents of Works
- The erotic ascetic and the religiohistorical sublime / Daniel Gold
- Birth done better : conceiving the immortal fetus in India, China, and Renaissance Europe / Hugh B. Urban
- Being Blake : antinomian thought, counterculture, and the art of the history of religions / Jeffrey R. Kripal
- Textual intimacy : benefits and techniques of academic translation / David L. Haberman
- Pages from the book of religions : comparing self and other in Mughal India / Aditya Behl
- The politics of "other peoples' myths" / Gail Sutherland
- The passions of late vedic texts : a short study of the emotion of fear in the Ṛgvidhāna / Laurie L. Patton
- The sacrifice of battle and the battle of yoga; or, how to word-away a discontented wife / Tamar Reich
- At the Maṇḍala's dark fringe : possession and protection in Tantric Bhairava cults / David Gordon White
- Sītā's dilemmas through the mail : Kumudini's mattering map of the Rāmāyaṇa / Paula Richman
- Inside/outside : where is Vālmīki in the story he tells? / Arshia Sattar
- Seizing the zombie's tongue : ambivalent protectors in the Kathmandu Valley of Nepal / Liz Wilson
- Skirting the issue : gender and identity in Kūṭiyāṭṭam Sanskrit drama / Bruce M. Sullivan
- On method and narrative; or, how a textualist gave birth to two ethnographers / Mathew N. Schmalz and Peter Gottschalk
- Wendy's children : an afterword / Wendy Doniger
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Notes from a Mandala gathers together current work in the history, ethnography, and textual study of religions in honor of the career of Wendy Doniger. Its authors are a new generation of leading scholars whose work falls in the interstices between the traditional disciplines: gender studies; the history of sexuality; the role of textual study and translation in the early twenty-first century; the borders between myth and literature; and, the place between ethnography and history of religions. Whether they are about history of religions, sexuality, politics, cross-cultural translation, or the slipperiness of categories, these essays honor a woman who has given many in the field a vocabulary for true scholarly conversation. Laurie L. Patton is Charles Howard Candler Professor of Early Indian Religions at Emory University. David Haberman teaches Hinduism in the Department of Religion at Indiana University.
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