ECSAS 2023 – Turin 26-29 July

23 – Engaging the world through contemporary South Asian tantric and shamanic traditions

South Asian tantra cannot be reduced to a corpus of texts, nor to a reservoir of classical philosophical debates over the ultimate nature of the world. Rather, it is well integrated in the sensible reality, the one that is susceptible to be perceived by the senses.

Convenors

Monika Hirmer - Department of Religions and Philosophies, SOAS, University of London, United Kingdom
Fabio Armand - Sciences and Humanities Confluences Research Center (EA1598), Lyon Catholic University (UCLy), France.

Long Abstract

South Asian tantra cannot be reduced to a corpus of texts, nor to a reservoir of classical philosophical debates over the ultimate nature of the world. Rather, it is well integrated in the sensible reality, the one that is susceptible to be perceived by the senses. In order to construct a broader picture of South Asian tantra, we emphasize its vernacular aspects and the fluidity between tantric, shamanic and folk traditions. Through the lived experiences of tantric practitioners and shamans, it is possible to observe common indigenous cultural backgrounds that contribute to explaining the great variety of beliefs and rituals in both tantra and shamanism(s).

Focusing on present-day South Asia, we propose to study tantric and shamanic practices and cosmologies embedded within human and cultural landscapes in view of their potential to address the following themes:

  • the current ecological crisis and the relations between human and non-human ontologies;
  • the perseverance of patriarchal dominance and other exploitative relationships;
  • the survival of individual/collective memories and cultural identities in the aftermath of colonialism.

The main objective will be to build a more sophisticated and transdisciplinary vision of tantric and shamanic practices in South Asia, which breaks down the boundaries that currently define these systems of interpretation of the world. We call for scholars from a variety of disciplines (anthropology, religious, gender and area studies, cognitive sciences, etc.) and espousing various methodological approaches, including ethnography, textual and historical analysis.

Presentations

Aristocratic to the Ordinary: Democratisation of Ritual – Healing Knowledge Among Muslims of Malabar Region.
A V Muhammed Hussain - Indian Institute of Technology Indore, Humanities and Social Sciences, Indore, India
Into the space-time of ban jhākri’s wildlands… What neurocognitive science tells us about shamanic initiations in the Himalayas?
Armand Fabio - Catholic University of Lyon (UCLy), Sciences and Humanities Confluences Research Center (EA1598), Lyon, France
Tigers, Humans and Were-tigers in Aboriginal India: a Case Study of Coexistance in the Anthropocene
Beggiora Stefano - University Ca' Foscari of Venice, Dept. of Asian and North African Studies, Venice, Italy
Inter-ontological beingness: the enmeshed nature of Śrīvidyā practitioners, idols and temples as post-anthropocentric perspective
Hirmer Monika - SOAS, University of London, Religions and Philosophies, London, United Kingdom
The Grace and the Curse of Mother-Goddesses and their devotees
Kunihiro Akiko - Waseda University, Tokyo, Japan
‘Unperforming’ Sparxan: Isolation of Menstruating Goddess Kamakhya and the Social Echo of Menstrual Stigma
Pradhan Prerna - Jawaharlal Nehru University, Theatre and Performance Studies, New Delhi, India
The yoni-pūjā at Kāmākhyā: Cultural memory against the religious oblivion
Rosati Paolo Eugenio - Università La Sapienza, Roma, Italy