ABSTRACT

This book offers fresh theoretical, methodological and empirical analyses of the relation between religion and the city in the South Asian context.

Uniting the historical with the contemporary by looking at the medieval and early modern links between religious faith and urban settlement, the book brings together a series of focused studies of the mixed and multiple practices and spatial negotiations of religion in the South Asian city. It looks at the various ways in which contemporary religious practice affects urban everyday life, commerce, craft, infrastructure, cultural forms, art, music and architecture. Chapters draw upon original empirical study and research to analyze the foundational, structural, material and cultural connections between religious practice and urban formations or flows. The book argues that Indian cities are not ‘postsecular’ in the sense that the term is currently used in the modern West, but that there has been, rather, a deep, even foundational link between religion and urbanism, producing different versions of urban modernity. Questions of caste, gender, community, intersectional entanglements, physical proximity, private or public ritual, processions and prayer, economic and political factors, material objects, and changes in the built environment, are all taken into consideration, and the book offers an interdisciplinary analysis of different historical periods, different cities, and different types of religious practice.

Filling a gap in the literature by discussing a diversity of settings and faiths, the book will be of interest to scholars to South Asian history, sociology, literary analysis, urban studies and cultural studies.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

Religion and the city in India

chapter 1|17 pages

The making of a city

Religion and society in the Caṇḍī-maṅgala of early modern Bengal

chapter 2|18 pages

Temple, urban landscape, and production of space

Śrirangam in the early modern Tamil region

chapter 3|14 pages

Hazrat-i-Dehli

Chishti Sufism and the making of the cosmopolitan character of the city of Delhi

chapter 5|17 pages

Reconfiguring a lost trace

The Buddhist ‘revival’ movement in late-nineteenth-century Calcutta and the Bengal Buddhist Association

chapter 6|16 pages

From Faridpur to Calcutta

The journey of the Matua faith

chapter 7|21 pages

On residues and reuse

A festival and its afterlife in an Indian metropolis

chapter 8|16 pages

The leftover untouch

Sensing caste in the modern urban lives of a devotional instrument

chapter 9|16 pages

Mourning in the city

Imambaras as sites of urban contestation in Kolkata

chapter 10|15 pages

Performing processions

Claiming the city 1

chapter 11|20 pages

Memory and space

Street shrines and popular devotion in Amritsar

chapter 12|13 pages

Convivial spaces

The art of being together and separate in the multi-religious city of Ahmedabad

chapter 13|17 pages

Religion, heritage, and identity

The contested heritage-scape of Varanasi 1