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Authors: Wendy Doniger

The Hindus (146 page)

BOOK: The Hindus
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of Shiva
Tantras and
in U.S.
of Vijayanagar Empire
violence and
see also specific temples
Ten Avatars (Dashavatara), temple of
Tertullian
Tevaram
(poetry collection)
Thanjavur, Brihadishvara temple
Thapar, Romila
Tharoor, Shashi
Theosophical Society
Theroux, Paul
“Thesis of Demonic Imitation, The”
Things They Carried, The
(O’Brien)
Third Buddhist Council
Thomas, Elizabeth Marshall
Thomas, Saint Judas
Thomas, Wendell
Thoreau, Henry David
Those Barren Leaves
(Huxley)
Thousand Names of Shiva, Hymn of
“Three Hundred Ramayanas: Five Examples and Three Thoughts on Translation” (Ramanujan)
Three Princes of Serendip, The
(Walpole)
Thugs
Thyestes
Tibet
Tilak, Bal Gangadhar
Tilottama (Asparas)
Time
Ages of
three aspects of
Times
(London)
Timur the Lame, Mongol emperor
Tirumal (Vishnu)
Tirumankai (poet)
Tirumular (mystic)
Tirumurai
(poetry collection)
Tiruvacacam
Tiruvatavurar Purana
Tiruvilaiyatal Purana
Todar-ananda
(“Todar’s Bliss”)
toddy
Tolstoy, Leo
tooth goddesses
tortoise (avatar of Vishnu)
Total Recall
(film)
“Tour of the Sacred
Tirthas

transmigration
Transposed Heads, The
(Glanville-Hicks)
Transposed Heads, The
(Mann)
Treta Yuga (Age of the Trey)
Treveleyan, George
Trimurti
(trinity)
Trishanku, King
Triyaruna, King
True Name (god of the Satnampanthis)
Truman, Harry S.
Tughluq, Feroz Shah
Tughluq, Muhammad bin
Tukaram (saint)
Tulsi, Tulsidas (poet)
Tulsibai (woman warrior)
Tulsidas (poet)
Turks (Turuskas)
Turner, Tina
Tvashtri (artisan)
ulama
Ulupi, serpent princess
Uma (goddess)
Underground
(film)
unicorn
Unitarianism
United States
Hinduism misappropriated in
Hindu population of
Hindu reverse colonization of
identity politics in
Indian languages’ influence on
interreligious interaction in
temples in
Vedanta in
United Way
Untouchables
Upanishads
addiction in
animals in
ascetic tradition of
caste in
composition of
continuation of the Vedas and
death and
dogs in
eroticism of
horses in
human sacrifice in
karma in
language of
moksha
in
monism in
non-Brahmin doctrines of
nonviolence in
paths of smoke and flame in
Persian translation of
progeneration in
Raikva story in
Rebirth and Release in
reincarnation in
renunciation in
sacrifice in
shakti
and
social and political world of
stages of consciousness in
textual world of
transmigration in
vegetarianism in
women in
Upasunda (antigod)
Urdu language
Urvashi (heavenly nymph)
Utilitarians
Vach (personification of Speech)
Vaikai (goddess)
Vaisheshika (Particularism)
Vaishnava Puranas
Vaishnavas (worshippers of Vishnu)
in Mughal Empire
Vaishnava Tantras
Vaishyas (merchants)
Vakataka dynasty
Valin (monkey king)
Valmiki (poet)
Varahamihira (astronomer)
Varman I, Narasimha king
Varuna (god of waters and morals)
in
Rig Veda
Vasishtha (sage)
Vasu, King
Vasudeva (name of Krishna, or father of Krishna)
Vasudevaka (worshipper of Krishna)
Vatican II
Vatsyayana (author of
Kama-sutra
)
Vayu (god of wind)
Vayu Purana
Vedanta
dualist (Dvaita) school of
in U.S.
Vedanta-Sutras
(of Badarayana)
Vedas (sacred texts)
Vedavati (incarnation of Sita)
Vedic peoples
brickmaking of
caste system of
Caucasian migration hypothesis and
indigenous origin hypothesis and
IVC hypothesis and
languages of
vegetarianism
in Brahmanas
of Gandhi
Manu and
renunciation and
sacrifice and
in
shastras
Tantras and
in Upanishads
violence and
Velar (caste)
Vena, King
Vessantara Jataka
Vibhishana (ogre)
Victoria, queen of England
Vidura (son of Vyasa)
Vidyapati (poet)
Vijayanagar Empire
temples of
worship of Rama in
Vikramaditya II, Chalukya king
Vindhya-vasini (name of the goddess Kali)
Vipashchit, King
Virabhadra (form of Shiva)
Viradha (ogre)
Viraka (son of Shiva)
see also
Parvati
Virashaivas (worshippers of Shiva)
Virata Parvan
Virgin Mary
Virochana (antigod)
Vishnu (god)
avatars of
Bali and
birth of Krishna and
Buddha as avatar of
Gupta Empire and
as Hari-Hara
as Kalki
mutual creation myth and
in Puranas
Rama as avatar of
Release and
in
Rig Veda
Vishnu Purana
Vishvamitra, King
Vishvanatha (Shiva as Lord of the Universe)
Vishvanatha Temple
Vishwa Hindu Parishad
Vithabai (goddess)
Vithoba (god)
Vitthal (god)
Vivekananda, Swami
Voltaire
Vratyas (ascetics)
Vrisha (priest)
Vritra (antigod)
Vyasa (sage)
birth of
children of
Wagner, Cosima
Wagner, Richard
Wales, Prince of
Walpole, Horace
Walton, Bishop
Warlis (tribal group)
Wegener, Alfred
Weinberger-Thomas, Catherine
Weinrich, Max
“Wendy’s Children” (Malhotra)
West, Martin
Wheeler, Hugh
White Mughals
Wilberforce, William
Wilkie, John Elbert
Wilkins, Charles
Wilson, Horace Hayman
Winckelmann, Johann
Winning Age,
see
Krita Yuga
Wittgenstein, Ludwig
Wodehouse, P. G.
Wolfe, Tom
womb house (
garbha griha
)
women
addiction and
Adivasis and
bhakti and
in Brahmanas
Buddhism and
depicted at IVC
in
Dharma-shastras
in Gupta Empire
Hinduism and
horse sacrifice and
in Kabir’s preaching
in
Kama-sutra
in
Mahabharata
Manu and
in Mauryan Empire
modern
in Mughal Empire
polyandry and
promiscuity and
Raj and
Rama and
rice powder designs of
in
Rig Veda
Sanskrit and
shakti
and
in
shastras
Sita as role model for
suttee practice and
Tantras and
in Upanishads
wall and floor paintings by
widowhood and
worship of Krishna and
Woodroffe, John (Arthur Avalon)
Wordsworth, William
World’s Parliament of Religions
Wotan
Wright, Frank Lloyd
Xena: Warrior Princess
(television show)
Xuan Zang
Yadavaprakasha, Acharya
Yajnavalkya (sage)
Yajur Veda
Yakshinis (tree spirits)
Yakshis (tree spirits)
Yama (god)
Yashoda, wife of Nanda
Yavakri (sage)
Yavanis (women body guards)
yoga
Yogananda, Sri Paramahansa
Yoga Sutras
(Patanjali)
Yogavasishtha
Chudala story in
Yogi, Maharishi Mahesh
Yoginis (Tantric female magicians)
Yourcenar, Marguerite
Yudhishthira, King
dilemma of
in heaven and hell
horse sacrifice of
Yugas
Yukteswar, Sri
Zadig
(Voltaire)
Zelazny, Roger
Zeus
Zimmer, Heinrich
Zoroastrianism
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Wendy Doniger holds two doctorates, in Sanskrit and Indian studies, from Harvard and Oxford. She is the author of several translations of Sanskrit texts and many books about Hinduism, and has taught at the School of Oriental and African Studies at the University of London and at the University of California at Berkeley. She is currently the Mircea Eliade Distinguished Service Professor of the History of Religions at the University of Chicago.
a
To invoke Marshall McLuhan’s famous phrase.
b
Other readers, allergic to methodology, should skip straight to chapter 2.
c
The term “kitchen language” was, I think, first coined for Afrikaans. But the eleventh-century Indian lexicographer Acharya Yadavaprakasha does actually supply a number of otherwise unattested Sanskrit words for everyday cooking devices (ladles, pots, and so forth), evidence either that some Brahmins
did
speak Sanskrit at home or that Yadavaprakasha was showing off by inventing Sanskrit words for objects normally referred to only in the vernaculars. After all, even in the modern period, people called television
dur-darshana,
a made-up Sanskrit neologism for “far-seeing,” and it caught on, though
dhumra-varttika
(“smokestick”) for “cigarette” did not; people persisted in calling them cigarettes.
d
A. K. Ramanujan used to talk of his father’s speaking Sanskrit in the front room, his mother’s speaking Tamil in the kitchen in the back.
e
Apparently this was first said in Yiddish, by Max Weinrich, who referred to a dialect with an army and a navy (“
A sprach is a dialekt mit a armee un a flot
”).
f
All translations from the Sanskrit are my own unless otherwise noted, and I have usually condensed and/or excerpted them, as I have done with citations of other narratives translated from other languages, though I have added nothing that was not in the text.
g
South Asians continue to devise creative ways of addressing this dilemma. In Tibet in the summer of 2006, I met a Buddhist who said that he would eat yak, but not fish, on moral grounds. That is, if you kill a yak, you destroy one soul but feed many people, but you have to kill many fish, and destroy many souls, to feed the same number of people. It occurred to me that it is a good thing that Tibet does not border on whaling waters. This attitude varies by country; Sri Lankan Buddhists opt for fish over large animals.
h
As, for instance, in the cow protection riots.
i
This is not because they see the moon from a different angle; in the Southern Hemisphere this is true, but most of India and all of Japan are in the Northern Hemisphere. From the Northern Hemisphere the eyes are at eleven and one, and the mouth at six; the hare’s ears are at between twelve and two, his head at between ten and twelve, his nose pointing at between nine and eleven, and his tail at between four and six.
j
This last group represents in many ways the ideal scholars of Hinduism, people like (in my generation) A. K. Ramanujan, Sudhir Kakar, Ashis Nandy, Vasudha Narayanan, and V. Narayana Rao, and, in the younger generation, so many more.
k
This characterizes the “take a Hindu to dinner” approach of such institutions as the one I always think of as the Center for the Prevention of World Religions.
l
Wittgenstein would, I think, have appreciated a more recent double image that has been circulated on the Internet. Close up, it looks like Albert Einstein, but from five feet away, it is the spitting image of Marilyn Monroe.
m
The author of the posting was Jitendra Bardwaj, of whom Wikipedia (which may or may not be accurate) says: “Jitendra Bardwaj (born 1937), an independent political campaigner in the United Kingdom, has contested five parliamentary by-elections in what began as an attempt to clear his name after he was convicted of assaulting a police officer outside the Houses of Parliament. As well as campaigning against what he believes is his personal mis-treatment by, and general flaws in, the British legal system, Bardwaj campaigns for the rights of ethnic minorities and for the introduction of Hindu yoga and meditation techniques in British schools.”
BOOK: The Hindus
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