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Meeting of Rivers
Meeting of Rivers
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A01=Elaine M. Fisher
Author_Elaine M. Fisher
Category=JHMC
Category=QRAC
Category=QRD
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_new_release
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Product details
- ISBN 9780197833216
- Weight: 694g
- Dimensions: 167 x 241mm
- Publication Date: 18 Mar 2026
- Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Hardback
The Meeting of Rivers reconstructs the prehistory of India's newest religion, Virasaivism (or Lingayatism) from its own voices, drawing on unstudied and unpublished archival sources in several south Indian languages. By radically reframing our understanding of the origins of Virasaivism, Elaine Fisher provides a counterpoint to inherited models of both Hindu devotional traditions as well as the history of vernacularization in South Asia.
According to conventional wisdom, Virasaivism was a strictly monolingual, vernacular devotional (bhakti) movement, restricted to the Kannada language, born in the twelfth century as a social protest against caste and the retrogressive Sanskrit language. The voice of the archive, however, tells a different story--Virasaivism was a multilingual religion from its inception. Its rejection of caste never entailed the rejection of Sanskrit; rather, its Sanskrit inheritance is pivotal to understanding the tradition's enduring legacy of anti-caste sentiment. By questioning the historical relationship between caste, religion, and language, this monograph highlights the contributions of premodern voices from diverse non-brahmana castes to India's religious history.
Simultaneously, The Meeting of Rivers articulates a new conceptual vocabulary for speaking in comparative theoretical terms about multilingualism and translation. It proposes a shift from a unidirectional model of vernacularization in South Asia in favor of a horizontal model of multilingual exchange in which religious content and subjectivities were shaped by multidirectional flows. As such flows traversed cultural zones across India's linguascape, local Virasaivisms--in the plural--were “translated” into being, irreducible to a singular monolingual social revolution.
Elaine M. Fisher is Associate Professor of Hinduism in the Department of Religious Studies at Stanford University. She is the author of Hindu Pluralism: Religion in the Public Sphere in Early Modern South India.
Meeting of Rivers
€98.99
