|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Timothy S. Dobe (Associate Professor of Religious Studies, Associate Professor of Religious Studies, Grinnell College)Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc Imprint: Oxford University Press Inc Dimensions: Width: 23.60cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 15.70cm Weight: 0.771kg ISBN: 9780199987696ISBN 10: 0199987696 Pages: 384 Publication Date: 29 October 2015 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsAcknowledgements Note on Diacritical Marks List of Images Chapter 1 - Introduction: Unsettling Saints Chapter 2 - How the Pope came to Punjab: Vernacular Beginnings, Protestant Idols and Ascetic Publics Chapter 3 - Resurrecting the Saints: The Rise of the High Imperial Holy Man Chapter 4 - The Saffron Skin of Rama Tirtha: Dressing for the West, the Spiritual Race and an Advaitin Autonomy Chapter 5 - Sundar Singh and the Oriental Christ of the West Chapter 6 - Rama Tirtha's Vernacular Vedanta: Autohagiographical Fragments of Rama's Indo-Persian Mysticism Chapter 7 - Frail Soldiers of the Cross: Lesser Known Lives of Sundar Singh Conclusion - Losing and Finding Religion Bibliography IndexReviewsHindu Christian Faqir is a much-welcome addition to the scholarship on modern Hinduism and Christianity, as well as, more broadly, on transnational religion in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries... It spans continents and disciplines and opens the history of modern Hinduism to multiple scholarly audiences, including scholars working not only in religious studies and South Asian studies, but also in ethnic studies, diaspora and transnational studies, and global cultural history. This is a book that builds bridgesbetween the ascetic bodies of Hindu history and the raced and gendered bodies of empire, between the global cultural flows of 'Guru English' and the shifting semantics of religion in modern Punjab. I hope that it gets the broad readership that it deserves. * J. Barton Scott, History of Religions * The tools-theoretical, linguistic, and cultural-Dobe employs in making his case are truly remarkable, and the copious endnotes by themselves may be worth the price of the book. * Reid B. Locklin, Journal of Religion * Interrogating the construction of sainthood in colonial India and the modern West, Dobe highlights the creative agency of two Indian holy men--one Hindu, one Christian. He demonstrates that sainthood is less about miracles and heavenly charisma than about specific kinds of performance grounded in local contexts and shared vernacular traditions. In the embodied comparative projects of these two 'upstart saints, ' Dobe finds clues for rethinking colonial religion. Unsettling in the best way possible! --Brian A. Hatcher, author of Bourgeois Hinduism Interrogating the construction of sainthood in colonial India and the modern West, Dobe highlights the creative agency of two Indian holy men--one Hindu, one Christian. He demonstrates that sainthood is less about miracles and heavenly charisma than about specific kinds of performance grounded in local contexts and shared vernacular traditions. In the embodied comparative projects of these two 'upstart saints, ' Dobe finds clues for rethinking colonial religion. Unsettling in the best way possible! --Brian A. Hatcher, author of Bourgeois Hinduism Timothy S. Dobe's innovative approach successfully incorporates bodily practice, ascetic performance, and a detailed understanding of context into his comparative textual study. By highlighting the multiple functions of sainthood in religious and social contexts and across religious traditions, Hindu Christian Faqir contributes to a broader approach to comparative study and a more nuanced understanding of colonial religion. --Journal of Hindu-Christian Studies Author InformationTimothy S. Dobe is Associate Professor of Religious Studies at Grinnell College. His research focuses on South Asian religions, especially Hinduism and Christianity, asceticism, sainthood, comparison, colonialism, and performance. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |