Description

Book Synopsis

Becoming Vaishnava in an Ideal Vedic City centers on a growing multinational community of ISKCON (International Society for Krishna Consciousness) devotees in Mayapur, West Bengal. While ISKCON’s history is often presented in terms of an Indian guru ‘transplanting’ Indian spirituality to the West, this book focusses on the efforts to bring ISKCON back to India. Paying particular attention to devotees’ failure to consistently live up to ISKCON’s ideals and the ongoing struggle to realize the utopian vision of an ‘ideal Vedic city’, this book argues that the anthropology of ethics must account for how moral systems accommodate the problem of moral failure.



Trade Review

“Overall, Fahy’s book is a valuable contribution to the ongoing study of Gauḍīya Vaiṣṇavism, and it illuminates several doxastic attitudes of contemporary ISKCON devotees that could not be attained through other methodological approaches such as theological or textual analyses.” • Journal of Dharma Studies

“This book is an important contribution to the ethnographic and theoretical literature. It is very well written and deals with an intrinsically interesting ethnographic context. It is theoretically ambitious in its engagement with the literature on anthropology of ethics.” • Jonathan Mair, University of Kent

“The book offers the first ethnography of the Mayapur phenomenon, presenting an account of its development, of the political and economic issues involved, the conflicts over building and so on, along with an account of the devotees who live there or visit, based on qualitative interviews and participant observation. The lives and aspirations of devotees are brought to life in this book.” • Gavin Flood, University of Oxford



Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Notes on Names, Language and Transliteration

Introduction: A Tale of Two Countercultures

Chapter 1. Land of the Golden Avatar
Chapter 2. Changing the Subject
Chapter 3. Practices of Knowledge
Chapter 4. Learning to Love Krishna
Chapter 5. Simple Living, High Thinking

Conclusion: Failing Well

Glossary
References
Index

Becoming Vaishnava in an Ideal Vedic City

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    A Hardback by John Fahy

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      Publisher: Berghahn Books
      Publication Date: 04/11/2019
      ISBN13: 9781789206098, 978-1789206098
      ISBN10: 178920609X

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Becoming Vaishnava in an Ideal Vedic City centers on a growing multinational community of ISKCON (International Society for Krishna Consciousness) devotees in Mayapur, West Bengal. While ISKCON’s history is often presented in terms of an Indian guru ‘transplanting’ Indian spirituality to the West, this book focusses on the efforts to bring ISKCON back to India. Paying particular attention to devotees’ failure to consistently live up to ISKCON’s ideals and the ongoing struggle to realize the utopian vision of an ‘ideal Vedic city’, this book argues that the anthropology of ethics must account for how moral systems accommodate the problem of moral failure.



      Trade Review

      “Overall, Fahy’s book is a valuable contribution to the ongoing study of Gauḍīya Vaiṣṇavism, and it illuminates several doxastic attitudes of contemporary ISKCON devotees that could not be attained through other methodological approaches such as theological or textual analyses.” • Journal of Dharma Studies

      “This book is an important contribution to the ethnographic and theoretical literature. It is very well written and deals with an intrinsically interesting ethnographic context. It is theoretically ambitious in its engagement with the literature on anthropology of ethics.” • Jonathan Mair, University of Kent

      “The book offers the first ethnography of the Mayapur phenomenon, presenting an account of its development, of the political and economic issues involved, the conflicts over building and so on, along with an account of the devotees who live there or visit, based on qualitative interviews and participant observation. The lives and aspirations of devotees are brought to life in this book.” • Gavin Flood, University of Oxford



      Table of Contents

      List of Illustrations
      Acknowledgements
      Notes on Names, Language and Transliteration

      Introduction: A Tale of Two Countercultures

      Chapter 1. Land of the Golden Avatar
      Chapter 2. Changing the Subject
      Chapter 3. Practices of Knowledge
      Chapter 4. Learning to Love Krishna
      Chapter 5. Simple Living, High Thinking

      Conclusion: Failing Well

      Glossary
      References
      Index

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