The volume collects a series of contributions that help reconstruct the recent history of the Nath tradition, highlighting important moments of self.reinterpretation in the sampradaya’s interaction with different social milieus. The leitmotif tying together the selection of articles is the authors’ explorations of the overlap between religious authority and political power. For example, in which ways do the Naths’ hagiographical claim of possessing yogic charisma (often construed as supernatural powers, siddhis) translate into mundane expressions of socio.political power? And how does it morph into the authority to reinterpret and recreate particular traditions? The articles approach different aspects of the recent history of the Nath sampradaya, spanning from stories of yogis guiding kings in the petty principalities of the eighteenth century to gurus who sought prominence in the transnational environments of the twentieth century; examining some Nath lineages and institutions under the British Raj, in the history of Nepal, and in contemporary India.
- Cover
- Table of Contents
- Foreword
- Note on transliterations
- Introduction
- Daniela Bevilacqua and Eloisa Stuparich
- 1 Current Research on Nāth Yogīs
- 2 Powerful Yogīs
- The Successful Quest for Siddhis and Power
- 3 Kingly Corruption and Ascetic Sovereignty in the Telugu Account of the Nine Nāths
- 4 In Siddhis and State
- Transformations of Power in Twentieth-Century Gorakhpur Temple Publications
- Christine Marrewa-Karwoski
- 5 The Search for the Jugi Caste in Pre-Colonial Bengal
- 6 Back When We Were Brahmins
- Historical and Caste Critique Among Bengali Householder Nāths
- 7 Shades of Power
- 8 Yogī, Paṇḍit, and Rāṣṭra-Bhakta
- Some Reconstructions of Yogī Naraharināth’s Religious Career
- 9 The Evocative Partnerships of a Monastic Nāth Temple in Contemporary Rajasthan
- 10 Towards a Nāth Re-Appropriation Of Haṭha-Yoga
- Index