Notes on Contributors
Gavin Flood: Series Introduction
Torkel Brekke: Introduction: Modernity and Hinduism
1: Adrian Plau: Early Modern Hinduism
2: Dermot Killingley: Rammohun Roy and the Bengal Renaissance
3: Hans Harder: Bankimchandra Chattopadhyay and modern Hinduism
4: Ferdinando Sardella: Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati and ISKCON
5: Tanisha Ramachandran: Murti, Idol, Art, and Commodity: The
Multiple Identities of Hindu Images
6: Gayatri Chatterjee: Indian Cinema and Modern Hinduism
7: Knut Aukland: Hindu Pilgrimage and Modern Tourism
8: Kathinka Frøystad: Hinduism and New Age: Patrimonial Oneness and
Religious Cosmopolitanism
9: Heinz Scheifinger: Online Hinduism
10: Vineeta Sinha: The Modern Hindu Diaspora
11: Manjari Katju: The History of Hindu Nationalism in India
12: Divya Vaid and Ankur Datta: Caste and Contemporary Hindu
Society: Community, Politics and Work
13: Werner Menski: Hindu Law in Modern Times: How Hindu Law
Continues in Modern India
14: Pankaj Jain: Modern Hindu Dharma and Environmentalism
15: David N. Gellner and Chiara Letizia: Hinduism in the Secular
Republic of Nepal
Torkel Brekke is Professor at Oslo Metropolitan University. His
publications include Makers of Modern Indian Religion in the Late
Nineteenth Century (2002), Religious Motivation and the Origins of
Buddhism: A Social-Psychological Exploration of the Origins of a
World Religion (2002), Fundamentalism: Prophecy and Protest in an
Age of Globalization (2012), Buddhism and Violence: Militarism and
Buddhism in Modern Asia (co-edited
with Vladimir Tikhonov; 2012), and Military Chaplaincy in an Era of
Religious Pluralism: Military-Religious Nexus in Asia, Europe, and
USA (co-edited with Vladimir Tikhonov; 2017).
The book investigates the tradition of goddess worship in Hinduism
from ancient to modern times...can be considered as a pathbreaking
contribution to the study of the divine feminine.
*Mriganka Mukhopadhyay, Religious Studies Review*
We have in this book, overall, another excellent addition to The
Oxford History of Hinduism series. No one who is seriously
interested in the modern development of Hinduism can afford to
ignore the essays presented here.
*Julius J. Lipner, Religion, Vol 52, no.1*
With such a broad spectrum of topics, this volume will be useful
for teaching undergraduate and graduate level classes about Indian
religions....the individual chapters focused on specific themes
within Hinduism will be useful for scholars of Hinduism at
large.
*Mugdha Yeolekar, International Journal of Hindu Studies*
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