Sacred Matters explores the lives of material objects in South Asian religions. Spanning a range of traditions including Hinduism, Islam, Jainism, Buddhism, and Christianity, the book demonstrates how sacred items influence and enliven the worlds of religious participants across South Asia and into the diaspora. Contributors examine a variety of objects to describe the ways sacred materials derive and confer meaning and efficacy, emerging from and giving shape to religious and nonreligious realms alike. Material forms of deity and divine power are considered along with commonplace ritual items, including images, clay pots, and camphor. The work also attends to materiality’s complex role within the ‘materially suspicious’ contexts of Islam, Theravada Buddhism, and Roman Catholicism. This engaging collection presents new frameworks for contemplating the ways in which historical, social, and sacred processes intertwine and collectively shape human and divine activity.
Inhoudsopgave
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Tracy Pintchman
1. The Icon of Yoga: Patanjali as Nagaraja in Modern Yoga
Stuart Ray Sarbacker
2. God’s Eyes: The Manufacture, Installation, and Experience of External Eyes on Jain Icons
John E. Cort
3. North Indian Materialities of Jesus
Mathew N. Schmalz
4. Celebrating Materiality:
Garbo, a Festival Image of the Goddess in Gujarat
Neelima Shukla-Bhatt
5. The Goddess’s Shaligrams
Tracy Pintchman
6. The Camphor Flame in an Age of Mechanical Reproduction
James Mc Hugh
7. Metal Hands, Cotton Threads, and Color Flags: Materializing Islamic Devotion in South India
Afsar Mohammad
8. Monastic Matters: Bowls, Robes, and the Middle Way In South Asian Theravada Buddhism
Bradley Clough
9. Letting Holy Water and Coconuts Speak for Themselves: Tamil Catholicism and the Work of Selva Raj
Selva J. Raj and
Corinne Dempsey
List of Contributors
Index
Over de auteur
Tracy Pintchman is Professor of Religious Studies and Director of the International Studies Program at Loyola University Chicago. Her books include
The Rise of the Goddess in the Hindu Tradition and
Guests at God’s Wedding: Celebrating Kartik among the Women of Benares, both published by SUNY Press.
Corinne G. Dempsey is Associate Professor of Religious Studies at Nazareth College. She is the author of
Bringing the Sacred Down to Earth: Adventures in Comparative Religion and
The Goddess Lives in Upstate New York: Breaking Convention and Making Home at a North American Hindu Temple.