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The Body of God

Hudson, D. Dennis:
The body of God : an emperor's palace for Krishna in eighth-century Kanchipuram / D. Dennis Hudson. Ed. by Margaret H. Case. - New York : Oxford University Press, 2008. - xxv, 660 S.
ISBN 978-0-19-536922-9 / 0-19-536922-X
DOI: 10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195369229.001.0001
US$ 99,00

Beschreibung
This book is the crowning achievement of the remarkable scholar D. Dennis Hudson, bringing together the results of a lifetime of interdisciplinary study of south Indian Hinduism.
   The book is a finely detailed examination of a virtually unstudied Tamil Hindu temple, the Vaikuntha Perumal (ca. 770 C.E.). Hudson offers a sustained reading of the temple as a coherent, organized, minutely conceptualized mandala. Its iconography and structure can be understood in the light of a ten-stanza poem by the Alvar poet Tirumangai, and of the Bhagavata Purana and other major religious texts, even as it in turn illuminates the meanings of those texts.
   Hudson takes the reader step by step on a tour of the temple, telling the stories suggested by each of the 56 sculpted panels and showing how their relationship to one another brings out layers of meaning. He correlates the stories with stages in the spiritual growth of the king through the complex rituals that formed a crucial dimension of the religion. The result is a tapestry of interpretation that brings to life the richness of spiritual understanding embodied in the temple.
   Hudson's underlying assumption is that the temple itself constitutes a summa theologica for the Pancharatra doctrines in the Bhagavata tradition centered on Krishna as it had developed through the eighth century. This tradition was already ancient and had spread widely across South Asia and into Southeast Asia. By interweaving history with artistic, liturgical, and textual interpretation, Hudson makes a remarkable contribution to our understanding of an Indian religious and cultural tradition. [Verlagsinformation]

Inhalt
Editor's note. vii
List of illustrations. xix
Abbreviations. xxv
Introduction: The Discovery. 3
PART I: THE APPROACH TO THE VISHNU-HOUSE
1. The Significance of the Temple. 15
2. Six Concepts. 31
3. The Poem. 47
4. The Emperor's Career Portrayed on the Prakara Wall. 57
PART II: THE SECRET DIMENSION OF THE VISHNU-HOUSE
5. The Temple Mandala and the Bottom-floor Sanctum. 85
6. The Middle-floor Sanctum: The Sculpted Panels of the Northern Path. 120
7. Northern Panels of the Northern Path: Transforming Power. 147
8. Northern Panels of the Northern Path: Fortying Omnscience. 175
9 The Middle-Floor Sanctum: The Sculpted Program of the Southern Path. 205
10 The Southern Panels of the Southern Path: "The Path of the Southern Doctrine". 247
PART III: THE PUBLIC DIMENSION OF THE VISHNU-HOUSE
Introduction: Spacetime and its Display. 297
11. The Vimana Panels on the Western Side. 317
12. The Panels on the Ardhamandapa or Porch. 345
13. The Vimana Panels on the Northern Side. 373
14. The Vimana Panels on the Eastern Side. 409
15. The Vimana Panels on the Southern Side. 433
Appendix 1: Who are the Bhagavatas? 491
Appendix 2: Vasudeva's path in the Satvata-samhita. 503
Appendix 3: Prithu, the People's Indra. 515
Appendix 4: Mantras in the Jayakhya-samhita. 529
Appendix 5: Periya Tirumoli 2.9. 533
Notes. 537
Glossary. 573
Bibliography. 615
Index. 641

Autor
D. DENNIS HUDSON (1938-2006) was Professor Emeritus of World Religions at Smith College from 1970 until his retirement in 2000. He published numerous articles, most related to his lifelong study of Vaikintha Perumal Temple in Kanchipuram. In addition, he published Protestant Origins in India: Tamil Evangelical Christians, 1706-1835 in 2000.

Herausgeberin
MARGARET CASE was for many years Asian Studies editor at Princeton University Press. She is the editor of Govindadeva: A Dialogue in Stone (1996) and author of Seeing Krishna: The Religious World of a Brahman Family in Vrindaban (2000). She organized this volume from virtually complete but differently structured chapters, and compiled the glossary with diacritical marks.

Quellen: Oxford University Press (USA); Google Books; Amazon; WorldCat; Oxford Scholarship