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Bloomsbury Research Handbook of Emotions in Classical Indian Philosophy

«This Handbook is a splendid collection of essays by scholars well-established and some still early in their careers. Resisting the habit of fitting Indian understandings of experience into old or new theories imported from the West, the volume’s thirteen essays go deep into South Asia’s Sanskrit and vernacular traditions to find and make use of fresh vocabulary and concepts apt to that South Asian context but also, by extension, to bringing fresh insight into conversations about experience in the academy globally. After this volume, we will not want to think of “experience” and “experiences” in the same way again. This is indeed a research handbook that will adorn the bookshelves of scholars and students for a generation and more.»

Francis X. Clooney, SJ, Parkman Professor of Divinity, Harvard University, USA

Drawing on a rich variety of premodern Indian texts across multiple traditions, genres, and languages, this collection explores how emotional experience is framed, evoked, and theorized in order to offer compelling insights into human subjectivity. Les mer

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Drawing on a rich variety of premodern Indian texts across multiple traditions, genres, and languages, this collection explores how emotional experience is framed, evoked, and theorized in order to offer compelling insights into human subjectivity.

Rather than approaching emotion through the prism of Western theory, a team of leading scholars of Indian traditions showcases the literary texture, philosophical reflections, and theoretical paradigms that classical Indian sources provide in their own right. The focus is on how the texts themselves approach those dimensions of the human condition we may intuitively think of as being about emotion, without pre-judging what that might be. The result is a collection that reveals the range and diversity of phenomena that benefit from being gathered under the formal term “emotion”, but which in fact open up what such theorisation, representation, and expression might contribute to a cross-cultural understanding of this term. In doing so, these chapters contribute to a cosmopolitan, comparative, and pluralistic conception of human experience.

Adopting a broad phenomenological methodology, this handbook reframes debates on emotion within classical Indian thought and is an invaluable resource for researchers and students seeking to understand the field beyond the Western tradition.

Detaljer

Forlag
Bloomsbury Academic
Innbinding
Innbundet
Språk
Engelsk
Sider
346
ISBN
9781350167773
Utgivelsesår
2021
Format
23 x 16 cm

Anmeldelser

«This Handbook is a splendid collection of essays by scholars well-established and some still early in their careers. Resisting the habit of fitting Indian understandings of experience into old or new theories imported from the West, the volume’s thirteen essays go deep into South Asia’s Sanskrit and vernacular traditions to find and make use of fresh vocabulary and concepts apt to that South Asian context but also, by extension, to bringing fresh insight into conversations about experience in the academy globally. After this volume, we will not want to think of “experience” and “experiences” in the same way again. This is indeed a research handbook that will adorn the bookshelves of scholars and students for a generation and more.»

Francis X. Clooney, SJ, Parkman Professor of Divinity, Harvard University, USA

«This book successfully outlines the pluralistic descriptions of emotions dealt with in Indian texts without categorizing them by Western concepts more dominant in the field. It is a laudable contribution to our understanding of the medieval Indian world of emotions in its own concepts and values.»

Religious Studies Review

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