ABSTRACT

This volume examines several theoretical concerns of embodiment in the context of Asian religious practice. Looking at both subtle and spatial bodies, it explores how both types of embodiment are engaged as sites for transformation, transaction and transgression. Collectively bridging ancient and modern conceptualizations of embodiment in religious practice, the book offers a complex mapping of how body is defined. It revisits more traditional, mystical religious systems, including Hindu Tantra and Yoga, Tibetan Buddhism, Bon, Chinese Daoism and Persian Sufism and distinctively juxtaposes these inquiries alongside analyses of racial, gendered, and colonized bodies. Such a multifaceted subject requires a diverse approach, and so perspectives from phenomenology and neuroscience as well as critical race theory and feminist theology are utilised to create more precise analytical tools for the scholarly engagement of embodied religious epistemologies. This a nuanced and interdisciplinary exploration of the myriad issues around bodies within religion. As such it will be a key resource for any scholar of Religious Studies, Asian Studies, Anthropology, Sociology, Philosophy, and Gender Studies.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

chapter 3|21 pages

Yuasa Yasuo’s contextualization of the subtle-body

Phenomenology and praxis

chapter 4|22 pages

Dismembering demons

Spatial and bodily representations in the fifteenth-century Ekaliṅgamāhātmya

chapter 5|20 pages

Subtle body

Rethinking the body’s subjectivity through Abhinavagupta body

chapter 7|23 pages

Sensing the ascent

Embodied elements of Muhammad’s heavenly journey in Nizami Ganjavi’s Treasury of Mysteries

chapter 8|19 pages

Bodies in translation

Esoteric conceptions of the Muslim body in early-modern South Asia 1

chapter 9|19 pages

The prostituted body of war

U.S. military prostitution in South Korea as a site of spiritual activism

chapter 11|24 pages

Bliss and bodily disorientation

The autophagous mysticism of Georges Bataille and the Taittirīya Upaniṣad