Brian K. Pennington is Associate Professor of Religion at Maryville College in Tennessee.
"Pennington has written an important book that redirects attention
to historical agents that mainstream postcolonial scholarship has
largely either oversimplified or passed over. He helps to advance a
new wave of scholarship that rejects the essentialism of
stereotypical, unitary visions not only of 'the East' but also of
'the West.'"--Steven S.
"The flourishing of new knowledge of India's past by British and
European scholars and administrators, the emergence of a
post-theological notion of religion based on an comparative
paradigm of universal religiousness in the contexts of cultural
specificity, an increasingly insistent Protestant mission movement,
a secular utilitarian notion of civilization, and a new discourse
of Hindu among Indians in India were taking place simultaneously in
the early
nineteenth century. Brian Pennington has investigated each of these
threads and their interwoven complexity and located them within the
matrix of the post-colonial academic study of religion. A worthy
and
worthwhile contribution to understanding a misunderstood
past.--Paul B. Courtright, Professor of South Asian Religions,
Emory University
"I read this study of cultural encounters between
early-19th-century Hindus and British Christians with a sense of
profound relief. The work complicates and problematises the
simplifications that much of postcolonial studies operate with. By
producing a richly textured account of religious debates and
evangelical traditions in Britain, it not only provides a
historical context for missionary lives, it also teases apart the
multiple and contradictory strands
within evangelicalism, normally taken to be a seamless monolith.
Changes within modern Hinduism, similarly, are shown to be
authentically internal developments that accommodate, but are not
dictated by,
the influence of new cultural encounters. Pennington deftly
combines social and doctrinal themes, and his reading of Bengali,
colonial, and missionary print cultures is stimulating. This is a
book of many histories, all of which are complex and
unexpected."--Tanika Sarkar, Centre for Historical Studies,
Jawaharlal Nehru University
"Was Hinduism Invented? is a timely and cogent reconsideration of
Hinduism as a word, a concept and, refreshingly, a reality that
became apparent in sharp focus in 19th-century British India.
Penningtons command of primary sources combines with alertness to
current issues in the study of religion to demonstrate why
Hinduism, properly understood, sheds new light on how and on what
terms India and the West discovered one another, why Hindus and
Christians relate as they do today, and how religions are best
conceived and studied."--Francis X. Clooney, SJ, author of Divine
Mother, Blessed Mother: Hindu Goddesses and the Virgin Mary
"The flourishing of new knowledge of India's past by British and
European scholars and administrators, the emergence of a
post-theological notion of religion based on an comparative
paradigm of universal religiousness in the contexts of cultural
specificity, an increasingly insistent Protestant mission movement,
a secular utilitarian notion of civilization, and a new discourse
of Hindu among Indians in India were taking place simultaneously in
the early
nineteenth century. Brian Pennington has investigated each of these
threads and their interwoven complexity and located them within the
matrix of the post-colonial academic study of religion. A worthy
and
worthwhile contribution to understanding a misunderstood
past."--Paul B. Courtright, Professor of South Asian Religions,
Emory University
"I read this study of cultural encounters between
early-19th-century Hindus and British Christians with a sense of
profound relief. The work complicates and problematises the
simplifications that much of postcolonial studies operate with. By
producing a richly textured account of religious debates and
evangelical traditions in Britain, it not only provides a
historical context for missionary lives, it also teases apart the
multiple and contradictory strands
within evangelicalism, normally taken to be a seamless monolith.
Changes within modern Hinduism, similarly, are shown to be
authentically internal developments that accommodate, but are not
dictated by,
the influence of new cultural encounters. Pennington deftly
combines social and doctrinal themes, and his reading of Bengali,
colonial, and missionary print cultures is stimulating. This is a
book of many histories, all of which are complex and
unexpected."--Tanika Sarkar, Centre for Historical Studies,
Jawaharlal Nehru University
"Pennington has written an important book that redirects attention
to historical agents that mainstream postcolonial scholarship has
largely either oversimplified or passed over. He helps to advance a
new wave of scholarship that rejects the essentialism of
stereotypical, unitary visions not only of 'the East' but also of
'the West.'"--Steven S. Maughan, Albertson College
"Was Hinduism Invented? is a timely and cogent reconsideration of
Hinduism as a word, a concept and, refreshingly, a reality that
became apparent in sharp focus in 19th-century British India.
Penningtons command of primary sources combines with alertness to
current issues in the study of religion to demonstrate why
Hinduism, properly understood, sheds new light on how and on what
terms India and the West discovered one another, why Hindus and
Christians relate as they do today, and how religions are best
conceived and studied."--Francis X. Clooney, SJ, author of Divine
Mother, Blessed Mother: Hindu Goddesses and the Virgin Mary
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