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Awards
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Gil Ben-Herut (Assistant Professor, Assistant Professor, University of South Florida)Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc Imprint: Oxford University Press Inc Dimensions: Width: 23.60cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 16.00cm Weight: 0.544kg ISBN: 9780190878849ISBN 10: 0190878843 Pages: 296 Publication Date: 16 August 2018 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsIntroduction Chapter 1: The Poetics of Bhakti Chapter 2: Who is a Bhakta? Chapter 3: The Society of Devotees Chapter 4: A Bhakti Guide for the Perplexed Brahmin Chapter 5: The King's Fleeting Authority and His Menacing Vaisnava Brahmins Chapter 6: Jains as the Intimate, Wholly Other ConclusionReviewsThis absorbing, truly pioneering book takes us back to the earliest known life-stories of the Virasaiva community of southern India'Protestants' before Hus or Luther, famous for their feistiness and devotion to egalitarian community. Ben-Herut shows that here as in Europe the egalitarian characterization cannot really stand up to historical scrutiny. The terrain is more complex and diverse. But the diversity itself is fascinating-and the feistiness is undiminished. * Jack Hawley, author of A Storm of Songs: India and the Idea of the Bhakti Movement * Siva's Saints is a fascinating study that marks a genuine contribution to scholarly understanding of an important, yet oft-overlooked, religious tradition of southern India. Gil Ben-Herut displays deep knowledge of his primary sources, and he offers a compelling argument for a more nuanced historical view of the early centuries of Kannada-language Saiva devotion. * Anne E. Monius, Professor of South Asian Religions, Harvard Divinity School * Ben-Herut is an essential voice in the critical historiography of devotion or bhakti in India. His study of a lively set of stories about medieval Saiva Kannada saints conveys the complexity of publics of devotion as people grappled with difficult problems of social ethics, religious difference, and otherness. If anyone is still questioning how to use religious texts to write compelling social and cultural history, read this book and you'll have your answer. * Christian Novetzke, author of Religion and Public Memory * Ben-Herut's work is both accessible to a general readership and integral to the library of any scholar of Hinduism. * Elaine Fisher, Reading Religion * ""Ben-Huret's inferences and observations not only invite us to rethink not only Kannada Bhakti but the whole of Indian Bhakti. I welcome this well-written, cogently argued book, as an invaluable contribution to Bhakti Studies and all the related areas."" -- H.S. Shivaprakash, The Hindu ""Ben-Herut's work is both accessible to a general readership and integral to the library of any scholar of Hinduism."" -- Elaine Fisher, Reading Religion ""'Siva's Saints is a ground-breaking and thought-provoking book that is innovative, well-researched, and well-written. Ben-Herut has established himself as a leader in the study of Indian devotional (bhakti) traditions with this remarkable scholarly contribution. This book will undoubtedly be part of ongoing scholarly discussions concerning Kannada-speaking religion and ought to become a mainstay in graduate courses about bhakti for years to come."" -- Caleb Simmons, Religion This absorbing, truly pioneering book takes us back to the earliest known life-stories of the Virasaiva community of southern India'Protestants' before Hus or Luther, famous for their feistiness and devotion to egalitarian community. Ben-Herut shows that here as in Europe the egalitarian characterization cannot really stand up to historical scrutiny. The terrain is more complex and diverse. But the diversity itself is fascinating-and the feistiness is undiminished. * Jack Hawley, author of A Storm of Songs: India and the Idea of the Bhakti Movement * Siva's Saints is a fascinating study that marks a genuine contribution to scholarly understanding of an important, yet oft-overlooked, religious tradition of southern India. Gil Ben-Herut displays deep knowledge of his primary sources, and he offers a compelling argument for a more nuanced historical view of the early centuries of Kannada-language Saiva devotion. * Anne E. Monius, Professor of South Asian Religions, Harvard Divinity School * Ben-Herut is an essential voice in the critical historiography of devotion or bhakti in India. His study of a lively set of stories about medieval Saiva Kannada saints conveys the complexity of publics of devotion as people grappled with difficult problems of social ethics, religious difference, and otherness. If anyone is still questioning how to use religious texts to write compelling social and cultural history, read this book and you'll have your answer. * Christian Novetzke, author of Religion and Public Memory * This absorbing, truly pioneering book takes us back to the earliest known life-stories of the Virasaiva community of southern India'Protestants' before Hus or Luther, famous for their feistiness and devotion to egalitarian community. Ben-Herut shows that here as in Europe the egalitarian characterization cannot really stand up to historical scrutiny. The terrain is more complex and diverse. But the diversity itself is fascinating-and the feistiness is undiminished. * Jack Hawley, author of A Storm of Songs: India and the Idea of the Bhakti Movement * 'Siva's Saints is a fascinating study that marks a genuine contribution to scholarly understanding of an important, yet oft-overlooked, religious tradition of southern India. Gil Ben-Herut displays deep knowledge of his primary sources, and he offers a compelling argument for a more nuanced historical view of the early centuries of Kannada-language 'Saiva devotion. * Anne E. Monius, Professor of South Asian Religions, Harvard Divinity School * Ben-Herut is an essential voice in the critical historiography of devotion or bhakti in India. His study of a lively set of stories about medieval 'Saiva Kannada saints conveys the complexity of publics of devotion as people grappled with difficult problems of social ethics, religious difference, and otherness. If anyone is still questioning how to use religious texts to write compelling social and cultural history, read this book and you'll have your answer. * Christian Novetzke, author of Religion and Public Memory * Author InformationDr. Gil Ben-Herut is an Assistant Professor in the Religious Studies Department, University of South Florida. His research interests include pre-modern religious literature in the Kannada language, South-Asian devotional traditions, and the vernacularization of Sanskrit poetics and courtly literature. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |