Books as Bodies and as Sacred Beings - James W Watts

Books as Bodies and as Sacred Beings - James W Watts

Body Building in the Hindu Tantric Tradition: The Advantages and Confusions of Scriptural Entextualization in the Worship of the Goddess Kali

Books as Bodies and as Sacred Beings - James W Watts

Rachel Fell McDermott [+-]
Barnard College
Professor Dept. of Asian and Middle Eastern Cultures Barnard College

Description

Rachel Fell McDermott analyzes Bengali Tantric poetry dedicated to the goddess Kālī. Culling examples from her previous publications about this tradition, she shows how Bengali court poets in the eighteenth century popularized the esoteric Tantric traditions that had become associated with Kālī over the preceding millennium. These traditions emphasized entextualizing Tantric teachings through meditation so as to reproduce the macrocosm within the microcosm of one’s own body. However, later Bengali poets reflect the rising popularity of bhakti traditions that simplify the tradition into pure devotion to the goddess herself, rather than trying to reproduce her journey within the body. McDermott thus charts the transition from esoteric to exoteric tradition that, for most people, changed their dedication to this Tantric deity from practices to be mastered into feelings of love and devotion.

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Citation

McDermott, Rachel. Body Building in the Hindu Tantric Tradition: The Advantages and Confusions of Scriptural Entextualization in the Worship of the Goddess Kali. Books as Bodies and as Sacred Beings. Equinox eBooks Publishing, United Kingdom. p. 67-82 Oct 2021. ISBN 9781781798850. https://www.equinoxpub.com/home/view-chapter/?id=38091. Date accessed: 29 Mar 2024 doi: 10.1558/equinox.38091. Oct 2021

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