Routledge handbook of yoga and meditation studies /

The Routledge Handbook of Yoga and Meditation Studies is a comprehensive and interdisciplinary resource, which frames and contextualises the rapidly expanding fields that explore yoga and meditative techniques. The book analyses yoga and meditation studies in a variety of religious, historical and g...

Descripció completa

Dades bibliogràfiques
Altres autors: Newcombe, Suzanne (Editor), O'Brien-Kop, Karen (Editor)
Format: Licensed eBooks
Idioma:anglès
Publicat: London ; New York, New York : Routledge, [2021]
Accés en línia:https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=2574222
Taula de continguts:
  • Cover
  • Half Title
  • Title Page
  • Copyright Page
  • Table of contents
  • Editorial board
  • Figures
  • Tables
  • Acknowledgements
  • Contributors
  • A note on terms and translations
  • Part I Introduction to yoga and meditation studies
  • 1 Reframing yoga and meditation studies
  • Introduction
  • Defining meditation and yoga: the challenges
  • Shifting discussions and emerging areas of research
  • Concluding remarks
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • 2 Decolonising yoga
  • Why decolonise?
  • Knowledge, body, empire
  • Travel, positionality and power
  • Nationalism, decolonisation, recolonisation
  • Conclusion: towards yoga as critique
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • 3 Meditation in contemporary contexts: Current discussions
  • Introduction
  • Challenges of definition
  • Historical and comparative approaches
  • Research positions
  • Critical discourses
  • Conclusion
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • 4 The scholar-practitioner of yoga in the western academy
  • Introduction
  • Varieties of scholar-practitioner
  • Conclusion
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • 5 Neoliberal yoga
  • Introduction
  • Selling yoga
  • Neoliberal yoga
  • Conclusion
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Part II History of yoga and meditation in South Asia
  • 6 How yoga became yoga: Yoga and meditation up to the classical period
  • Introduction
  • Pre-classical period
  • Prehistoric: the Indus Valley Civilization
  • Early history: yoga in the Vedas
  • What was the praxis of the Buddha called?
  • Mahabharata and Bhagavadgita: sam.khya and yoga (theory and practice)
  • The terms yogavacara and yogacara in Buddhist sources
  • Hiran.yagarbha's Yogasastra
  • Pasupatayoga
  • Classical period
  • The Patañjalayogasastra
  • Classical period after the Patañjalayogasastra
  • Conclusion
  • Abbreviations
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • 7 Buddhist meditation in South Asia: An overview
  • Introduction
  • Key terms.
  • Meditation subjects
  • Main meditative techniques and paths of spiritual cultivation
  • Early and mainstream Buddhism
  • Tranquillity and insight
  • The path of spiritual cultivation in Sarvastivada Buddhism
  • Mahayana Buddhism
  • Emptiness and compassion
  • The path of spiritual cultivation in Yogacara Buddhism
  • Tantric Buddhism
  • Visualisations and energy control
  • The path of spiritual cultivation in the noble lineage of the esoteric community
  • In lieu of conclusion
  • Original sources and abbreviations
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • 8 Tantric transformations of yoga: Kun.d.alini in the ninth to tenth century
  • Introduction
  • Ṣaṭka 1
  • Ṣaṭka 2
  • Ṣaṭka 3
  • Ṣaṭka 4
  • Conclusion
  • Glossary
  • Abbreviations
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • 9 Early haṭhayoga
  • Introduction
  • Textual criticism and haṭhayoga
  • Precursors of haṭhayoga
  • Early haṭha's textual corpus
  • Goals of haṭhayoga
  • Haṭhayoga after the Haṭhapradipika
  • Haṭhayoga in contemporary ascetic culture
  • Haṭhayoga in modern global yoga
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • 10 Yoga and meditation in modern esoteric traditions
  • Introduction
  • Mesmerism
  • Spiritualism and early occultism
  • The Theosophical Society
  • Later Occultism and New Thought
  • Conclusion
  • Bibliography
  • 11 Hindu ascetics and the political in contemporary India
  • Introduction
  • The social involvement of modern Hindu ascetics
  • Contemporary configurations
  • Conclusion
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • 12 Yoga and meditation as a health intervention
  • Introduction
  • Yoga and meditation in AYUSH
  • Historical entanglements of yoga, meditation and health
  • Contemporary experiences of yogic health interventions in India
  • Conclusion
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Part III Doctrinal perspectives
  • 13 Yoga and meditation in the Jain tradition
  • Introduction
  • The term yoga in early Jain texts.
  • Bhāvanā-yoga
  • Dhyāna-yoga
  • Mahāvīra's meditation
  • The four dhyānas
  • The two meditations: worldly (saṃsārika) psychological states
  • Ārtta- dhyāna (anguished meditation)
  • Raudra-dhyāna (wrathful meditation)
  • The two meditations: liberating psychological states
  • Dharma-dhyāna (virtuous meditation)
  • Śukla-dhyāna (pure meditation)
  • Digambara meditation on the soul
  • Contemplation (anuprekṣā)
  • Āsana
  • Medieval Jain yoga
  • Ācārya Haribhadra
  • Ācārya Śubhacandra
  • Ācārya Hemacandra
  • Modern Jain yoga
  • Conclusion
  • Abbreviations
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • 14 Daoist meditation
  • Introduction
  • On meditation and so-called 'Taoist yoga'
  • The Daoist tradition and types of Daoist meditation
  • 'Guarding the One'
  • Visualising the dipper
  • Forming the elixir
  • Sitting in the modern Daoist tradition
  • Glossary
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • 15 Islam, yoga and meditation
  • Introduction: the issue of permissibility
  • Muslim engagement with yoga
  • When all breaths are not commensurable: `ilm-i dam and zikr, svarodaya and prāṇāyāma
  • Meditation
  • Contemporary issues
  • Conclusion
  • Glossary
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • 16 Sikhi(sm): Yoga and meditation
  • Introduction
  • Medieval background: Indian renaissance and Gur-Sikh Enlightenment
  • Guru Granth Sahib's critique of yoga and meditation
  • Aasan (spiritual yoga)
  • True yoga as sahaj-jog
  • Takhat (political yoga): raaj-jog
  • Splitting raaj-jog in the conversion to western modernity
  • Contemporary scene: Sikh yoga and meditation movements
  • Conclusion
  • Glossary
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • 17 Christianity: Classical, modern and postmodern forms of contemplation
  • Introduction
  • Contemplation within the context of Christian prayer
  • Classics of Christian contemplation
  • John Cassian
  • The Cloud of Unknowing
  • Recollection: St. Teresa of Avila.
  • Recollection: Evelyn Underhill
  • Eastern Orthodox recollection: the Jesus Prayer
  • Popular contemporary Christian contemplation
  • Centering Prayer
  • Christian Meditation
  • Postmodern Christian contemplation: non-Christian influences and religious hybridity
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • 18 Secular discourse as a legitimating strategy for mindfulness meditation
  • Introduction
  • Research method
  • Science, scientism and neuroscientism
  • Academisation as other sources of legitimacy
  • Rhetoric of universality
  • Buddhist discourse of suffering
  • Ethics of rebranding: participants' position
  • Mental health and resilience
  • OMC history and mission statement
  • Concluding remarks
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Part IV Global and regional transmissions
  • 19 Yoga and meditation traditions in insular Southeast Asia
  • Introduction
  • The earliest literary evidence: the old Javanese Rāmāyaṇa
  • Old Javanese Śaiva sources on aṣṭāṅgayoga and ṣaḍaṅgayoga
  • Old Javanese Buddhist sources on yoga
  • Classical Malay literature from Sumatra
  • Yoga in modern Bali
  • Modern Javanese mystical movements
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • 20 Yoga in Tibet
  • Introduction: yoga comes to Tibet
  • Buddhist philosophy as the foundation of tantra and yoga
  • Tibetan yoga in the three main canons
  • Yoga as a doxographical category: the four-fold and six-fold classes of tantra
  • The Ancient tradition: six classes of tantra culminating in 'Supreme Yoga'
  • The New orders of Tibetan Buddhism and the four classes of tantra
  • Naljor in ancillary branch systems
  • Kālacakra's six yogas
  • Mahāmudrā's four yogas
  • Nāropa's six doctrines
  • Niguma's six dharmas
  • Tibetan yogis
  • Milarepa, Tibet's most famous yogi
  • Case study: monastic yogins at Namdroling Monastery and Nunnery in South India
  • The annual retreats
  • It begins with empowerment
  • Motivation setting.
  • The yoga practice
  • The sequences
  • Conclusion
  • Glossary
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • 21 The political history of meditation and yoga in Japan
  • Introduction
  • Buddhism and meditation from the ancient to medieval periods
  • Transformations in the early modern era
  • Confucianism and the imperial family line in Japan
  • Kokugaku and Daoism
  • Meditation and yoga in the modern period
  • Psychologisation and universalisation of meditation
  • Political theology on meditation
  • Postmodern meditation and yoga
  • Conclusion
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • 22 Yoga and meditation in Korea
  • Introduction
  • Traditions of practice and meditation in Korea
  • Confucianism in Korea
  • Daoism in Korea
  • Buddhism in Korea
  • Won Buddhism as a new religion in Korea
  • Yoga in Korea
  • Current status of academic study of yoga in Korea
  • Bibliography
  • 23 Yoga in Latin America: A critical overview
  • Introduction
  • Understandings of 'yoga'
  • Forerunners and diffusors
  • Typologies 1: yoga, meditation and bodywork
  • Typologies 2: Latin American yoga
  • Concluding remarks
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • 24 Anglophone yoga and meditation outside of India
  • Introduction
  • Early modern and nineteenth-century networks and translations
  • The Theosophical Society
  • Early twentieth-century publications
  • Anglophone physical culture and yoga
  • Immigration, English and empire
  • Adult education and mass media
  • Movement of gurus and the counter-culture
  • The arrival of scientific meditation
  • Early 1980s to the present
  • Conclusion
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • 25 The yogic body in global transmission
  • Introduction
  • Context and terms
  • Yogic body
  • Cakras
  • Kuṇḍalinī and kuṇḍalinī yoga
  • Behind the veil
  • Public kuṇḍalinī
  • Concluding remarks
  • Note
  • Bibliography
  • Part V Disciplinary framings
  • 26 Philology and digital humanities
  • Introduction.