‘Sanskrit-speaking’ Villages, Linguistic Utopias and the Metaphysics of Development

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A01=Patrick S.D. McCartney
Author_Patrick S.D. McCartney
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census language data
competitive diplomacy
demography
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forthcoming
India
Indian knowledge systems
language revivalism
linguistic anthropolgy
linguistic anthropology
Sanskrit language demographics research
sociolinguistic analysis
soft power
soft power studies
Spoken Sanskrit
Sustainable development
Yoga lifestyle

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032759746
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Aug 2026
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book is a recollection of McCartney’s journey across ‘Sanskritland,’ which is the term coined to refer to the utopian landscape within which the ‘Language of the Gods’ is thought to be spoken.

There are three destinations on the author’s journey. The first includes understanding how Sanskrit narratives are woven into yoga-inflected ‘lifestyles,’ forming biographies operationalised toward soft-power purposes. Next, the historical sociolinguistic contexts that have shaped Sanskritland are discussed, framed by application in sustainable development narratives. Finally, comprehensive demographic and linguistic analyses of Sanskrit across all of India’s census enumerations (from 1872 to 2011) shows the ‘shifting sands’ of Sanskrit’s ‘speakers’ and how the ‘Sanskrit-speaking’ village data show that most people who identify as speakers of Sanskrit live in urban areas and ‘speak’ Sanskrit as a third language. All of these together shed light on how, why, and where Sanskrit is spoken in the twenty-first century, the complex and dynamic historical and contemporary that have allowed this, and how both yoga and Sanskrit are instruments for development and soft-power projects.

This book is an essential read for scholars and students of linguistic anthropology, Indology and sustainable development.

Patrick S.D. McCartney, who received his PhD in sociolinguistic and cultural economic anthropology from the Australian National University in 2016, is trained in a range of disciplines, including Indo-European linguistics, Indology, archaeology and cultural heritage management. His research has evolved to incorporate methods from computational social science and geospatial data visualisation. Patrick uses yoga and Sanskrit as frameworks to analyse the political ambitions and soft-power dynamics of the Indian state, as well as the influence of non-state actors in the global wellness tourism industry.

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