
The Parashakthi Temple in Pontiac, Michigan serves as a site of worship for the Hindu goddess Karumariamman, whose origins are in South India. In her American home Karumariamman has assumed the status of Great Goddess, a tantric deity and wonder worker who communicates directly with devotees through dreams, visions, and miracles. Drawing on fifteen years of field work, Tracy Pintchman reveals how the Parashakthi Temple has become a site of theological and ritual innovation.A unique spiritual community, the temple does not simply reproduce Indian goddess traditions, but instead reimagines Hinduism and the Hindu Goddess in the American religious, cultural, and natural landscape. The congregation's faith is grounded in a vision of the Goddess as a breaker of boundaries, including those of race, ethnicity, religion, geography, history, and nationality. Like her congregants, Pintchman suggests, the goddess is emblematic of the qualities of a new immigrant; she embraces the opportunities her new home affords her and refashions herself, but she does not forget her roots, keeping one foot planted in her Indian homeland and another planted firmly in her new land, the United States.Pintchman considers larger issues concerning the creativity of immigrant Hindu communities and the ways in which diaspora contexts facilitate the production of new forms of Hinduism that are made possible by globalization and modern technology.
This work investigates how the Parashakthi Temple in Michigan functions as a site of theological and ritual innovation for the Hindu diaspora in North America. Tracy Pintchman, a scholar of religious studies, utilizes fifteen years of ethnographic fieldwork to examine the adaptation of the goddess Karumariamman within a Western context. The text argues that the temple community actively reimagines traditional Hindu practices to align with the realities of the American landscape, positioning the deity as a symbol of boundary-crossing and immigrant identity.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars of religious studies recognize this text as a significant contribution to the understanding of how immigrant communities adapt ancient traditions to new cultural environments. Readers frequently note the balance between detailed ethnographic observation and broader theoretical insights regarding the nature of diaspora religion.
Page Count:
240
Publication Date:
2024-09-20
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190673028
ISBN-13:
9780190673024
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