
Provincial Hinduism Explores Intersecting Religious Worlds In An Ordinary Indian City That Remains Close To Its Traditional Roots, While Bearing Witness To The Impact Of Globalization. Daniel Gold Looks At Modern Religious Life In The Central Indian City Of Gwalior, Drawing Attention To The Often Complex Religious Sensibilities Behind Ordinary Hindu Practice. Gold Describes Temples Of Different Types, Their Legendary Histories, And The People Who Patronize Them. He Also Explores The Attraction Of Sufi Shrines For Many Gwalior Hindus. Delicate Issues Of Socioreligious Identity Are Highlighted Through An Examination Of Neighbors Living Together In A Locality Mixed In Religion, Caste, And Class. Pursuing Issues Of Community And Identity, Gold Turns To Gwalior's Maharashtrians And Sindhis, Groups With Roots In Other Parts Of The Subcontinent That Have Settled In The City For Generations. These Groups Function As Internal Diasporas, Organizing In Different Ways And Making Distinctive Contributions To Local Religious Life. The Book Concludes With A Focus On New Religious Institutions Invoking Nineteenth-century Innovators: Three Religious Service Organizations Inspired By The Great Swami Vivekenanda, And Two Contemporary Guru-centered Groups Tracing Lineages To Radhasoami Maharaj Of Agra. Gold Offers The First Book-length Study To Analyze Religious Life In An Ordinary, Midsized Indian City, And In So Doing Has Created An Invaluable Resource For Scholars Of Contemporary Indian Religion, Culture, And Society.
This book investigates how religious life in a midsized Indian city functions as a complex intersection of traditional practices and modern global influences. Daniel Gold, a scholar of South Asian religions, utilizes ethnographic fieldwork conducted in Gwalior to analyze the religious sensibilities of its inhabitants. By examining temple culture, Sufi shrine visitation, and the social dynamics of diverse ethnic groups, Gold argues that ordinary Hindu practice is far more nuanced than broad generalizations suggest.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars of South Asian studies recognize this work as a foundational text for understanding religious life in non-metropolitan Indian settings. Experts frequently highlight the book's ability to bridge the gap between local tradition and the broader impacts of globalization on religious identity.
Page Count:
304
Publication Date:
2014-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press, Incorporated
ISBN-10:
0190212500
ISBN-13:
9780190212506
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