Pilgrimage in the Hindu Tradition

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A01=Knut A. Jacobsen
Author_Knut A. Jacobsen
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Decentered polycentrism
Early Vedic Tradition
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Hindu Pilgrimage
Hindu Pilgrimage Places
Hindu Pilgrimage Traditions
Hindu ritual practice
Hindu Sacred Geography
Hindu traditions
Holy Man
liberation
Natural Beauty
Pilgrimage
pilgrimage narratives
Pilgrimage Places
Pilgrimage Sites
Pilgrimage Texts
Pilgrimage Traditions
Pilgrimage Travel
places
power
Promotion Texts
religious pluralism India
rewards
sacred
sacred geography
Sacred Narratives
Sage Kapila
salvific
Salvific Goal
Salvific Liberation
Salvific Power
Salvific Rewards
Salvific Sites
Salvific Space
site
space
spatial soteriology Hinduism
Tamil Nadu
tirtha studies
traditions
travel
Uttar Pradesh
Vedic Tradition
water symbolism religion

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138844667
  • Weight: 380g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Aug 2015
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Salvific space is one of the central ideas in the Hindu traditions of pilgrimage, and concerns the ability of space, especially sites associated with bodies of water such as rivers and lakes, to grant salvific rewards. Focusing on religious, historical and sociological questions about the phenomenon, this book investigates the narratives, rituals, history and structures of salvific space, and looks at how it became a central feature of Hinduism.

Arguing that salvific power of place became a major dimension of Hinduism through a development in several stages, the book analyses the historical process of how salvific space and pilgrimage in the Hindu tradition developed. It discusses how the traditions of salvific space exemplify the decentred polycentrism that defines Hinduism. The book uses original data from field research, as well as drawing on main textual sources such as Mahābhārata, the Purāṇas, the medieval digests on pilgrimage places (tīrthas), and a number of Sthalapurāṇas and Māhātmyas praising the salvific power of the place. By looking at some of the contradictions in and challenges to the tradition of Hindu salvific space in history and in contemporary India, the book is a useful study on Hinduism and South Asian Studies.

Knut A. Jacobsen is Professor in the History of Religions at the University of Bergen, Norway. He has published widely on religions in South Asia and in the South Asian diasporas.

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