Description
This book focuses on genealogies of religious authority in South Asia, examining the figure of the guru in narrative texts, polemical tracts, hagiographies, histories, in contemporary devotional communities, New Age spiritual movements and global guru organizations.
Experts in the field present reflections on historically specific contexts in which a guru comes into being, becomes part of a community, is venerated, challenged or repudiated, generates a new canon, remains unique with no clear succession or establishes a succession in which charisma is routinized. The guru emerges and is sustained and routinized from the nexus of guruship, narratives, performances and community. The contributors to the book examine this nexus at specific historical moments with all their elements of change and contingency.
The book will be of interest to scholars in the field of South Asian studies, the study of religions and cultural studies.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction: Contextualizing gurus in South Asia, István Keul and Srilata Raman; 2. How the guru lost his power: Public anxieties of tantric knowledge in the Sanskrit vetāla tales, Adheesh Sathaye; 3. The guru function in the emergence of Marathi literature in thirteenth-century India, Christian Lee Novetzke; 4. Guru Dādū in the perception of his direct disciples, Monika Horstmann; 5. Canonization of bhakti gurus: A missing link between Jai Singh II and Hariścandra, Heidi Pauwels; 6. The emergence of the social in the service of the Guru, Anne Murphy; 7. Between sagacity and scandal: Celibacy, sexuality, and a guru in nineteenth-century Punjab, Anshu Malhotra; 8. The occluded guru, or the guru as gardener: C. Jinarajadasa’s theosophical universe, Smriti Srinivas; 9. Inversions of Kim: The Victorian childhood of J. Krishnamurti, Srilata Raman; 10. The Vaidika’s limits: Candraśekharendra Sarasvatī Svāmī (1894-1994) and Tamil brahmin guruship, Eric Steinschneider; 11. The fiction of ecumenical universalism: Where gurus do not matter, Martin Fuchs; 12. Between the letter and the spirit: Gandhi’s orbit, Kumkum Sangari; 13. Guru sex: Charisma, proxemic desire, and the haptic logics of the guru-disciple relationship, Amanda Lucia; 14. Manufacturing charisma in the metropolis, István Keul; 15. Narrating the spiritualized life, Nikhil Govind; 16. The gurus of a post-colonial education: An autobiographical note, Vasudha Dalmia; 17. Selected publications by Vasudha Dalmia



