Priya Swamy brings us to a twice-displaced Hindu diaspora community in the Netherlands, whose history of indentured labour still resonates. By exploring “absent” Hindu temples in a neighbourhood in southeast Amsterdam, Swamy’s theoretically sophisticated approach to today’s post-colonial realities opens important new vistas for the study of Hindu diaspora.
Corinne Dempsey, Professor of Religious Studies, Nazareth College, USA
This book asks us to consider what is absent, rather than what is present, when studying religions. Priya Swamy argues that absent religious spaces are in themselves abstract locations that painfully memorialize feelings of shame, oppression and marginalization. She shows that these ‘traumas of absence’ – the complex, entwined and emotional responses to absent spaces – can be articulated through mob violence and destruction, but also anticolonial struggles or human rights issues.This study focusses on the absence of temples across the global Hindu diaspora, taking the tumultuous narrative of the Devi Dhaam community in Amsterdam Southeast as a central location to detail the over thirty-year struggle to build a Hindu temple in a neighbourhood of vibrant mosques and churches. In 2010, their makeshift space was pulled away from them, provoking tears among elderly devotees, rage among board members and devastation in the wider community. Leaving their goddess with no place to live, some devotees feared for the dangerous repercussions that would follow from uprooting a divine presence from its home.By exploring the ways in which the trauma of absent religious spaces has become a formative aspect of localized but also globalized Hindu identity, this book rethinks the way that empty lots, piles of rubble and abandoned buildings around the world are themselves powerful monuments to the trauma of absent temple spaces that mobilize campaigns for Hindu spaces.
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1. Introduction: Layers of Absence2. Secular Worldviews and Hindu Religious Space3. Makeshift Religious Spaces4. Return as Reparation post -20105. Epilogue: Absence, Diaspora and Hindu 'Feelings'BibliographyIndex
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This is the first ethnography and history of Hinduism and Hindus in Amsterdam, focusing on the absence of Hindu religious space in the global city.
Fills a gap in Hindu diaspora studies by focusing on a community in the Netherlands whose members hail from a former Dutch Caribbean colony, moving research beyond anglophone Hindu diasporas
Religions, spiritualities and mysticisms are deeply implicated in processes of place-making. These include political and geopolitical spaces, local and national spaces, urban spaces, global and virtual spaces, contested spaces, spaces of performance, spaces of memory and spaces of confinement. At the leading edge of theoretical, methodological, and interdisciplinary innovation in the study of religion, Bloomsbury Studies in Religion, Space and Place brings together and gives shape to the study of such processes.These places are not defined simply by the material or the physical but also by the sensual and the psychological, by the ways in which spaces are gendered, classified, stratified, moved through, seen, touched, heard, interpreted and occupied. Places are constituted through embodied practices that direct critical and analytical attention to the spatial production of insides, outsides, bodies, landscapes, cities, sovereignties, publics and interiorities.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781350079069
Publisert
2024-10-17
Utgiver
Vendor
Bloomsbury Academic
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
192
Forfatter