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Full Description
God's Own Land follows the tectonic shift from traditional religious pilgrimage in the early twentieth-century to contemporary pilgrim tourism, in which ever-burgeoning visitor numbers have brought both benefits and challenges to the Garhwal region of India—the source of Hindu India's sacred river, the Ganges. Despite Hinduism's regional and sectarian variation, India's Garhwal Himalaya region is one the most sacred places to Hindus, drawing pilgrims across sectarian lines from throughout the subcontinent and the world. This sacred land—devabhumi or "land of the gods"—appears in foundational Hindu stories describing the presence and activity of gods, goddesses, saints, and cultural heroes.
This study from James G. Lochtefeld draws out Hindu convictions regarding the Garhwal's eternal and continuing sanctity as a holy region, based on the premise of an "imagined landscape." The region is strongly associated with divine activity and yet the landscape is a real place with a real history inhabited by real people, who have historically been poor because of the challenges created by the region's geography. Juxtaposing the history of the region with its construction in the Hindu imaginary, this multidisciplinary study unpacks the nuanced image of the region, its religious significance, and the impacts of pilgrimages on the community through textual, historical, and ethnographic methods.
Contents
Acknowledgments
A Note on Transliteration
Chapter 1: Introduction to the Ganga Himalaya
Chapter 2: Land and Landscape in the Ganga Himalaya
Chapter 3: The Ganga Himalaya: History
Chapter 4: The Narrative Landscape
Chapter 5: Mapping the Sacred Landscape
Chapter 6: Pilgrimage in the Ganga Himalaya
Chapter 7: The Dev Bhumi in the 21st century
Chapter 8: Afterword
Appendices
Endnotes
Glossary
List of Sources
Index