[INDOLOGY] Alf Hiltebeitel 1942-2023

Robert P. GOLDMAN rpg at berkeley.edu
Wed Mar 15 00:01:38 UTC 2023


Thanks. Brian, for passing on this very sad news for all who knew Alf and his work in  the fields of Epic Studies and  the History of Religions. Alf was, indeed, a colossus in the field, especially in regard to the Mahābhārata. He will be deeply missed but, as you have shown, his immense scholarly legacy will be with us forever.

Alf and I were old friends although we  sometimes disagreed on scholarly  issues  concerning the Mbh. We met in Poona (Pune) in the 1970-s and we and our  respective young sons, Simon, and Jesse became close friends. Some of my fondest memories of Alf are of sitting together with him in Mahabaleshwar reading  the Mahābhārata and Ramāyaṇa in those days. Alas,  te hi no divasā gatāh. He will be missed by all who had the good fortune to know him. Still, na khalu sa uparato yasya vallabho janaḥ smarati.

Bob

Dr. R. P.  Goldman
William and Catherine Magistretti Distinguished Professor of Sanskrit Emeritus and
Distinguished Professor in the Graduate School
Department of South and Southeast Asian Studies MC # 2540
The University of California at Berkeley
Berkeley, CA 94720-2540





> On Mar 14, 2023, at 7:40 AM, Collins, Brian via INDOLOGY <indology at list.indology.info> wrote:
> 
> Dear Colleagues,
> 
> I am sorry to report that Alf Hiltebeitel passed away in the Republic of Colombia a few days ago. It doesn’t need saying, but he was a giant in the field and made important contributions as a historian of religions, an ethnographer, a philologist, and a scholar of intellectual history. He even continued producing scholarship well after his advanced Parkinson’s made it impossible to speak and very difficult to write. 
> 
> He was most well known for his work on the Mahābhārata epic. And over the course of his life, he practically produced an epic of his own.
> 
> His first book, The Ritual of Battle (Cornell 1976), and his two most recent books, Nonviolence in the Mahābhārata (Routledge 2016) and World of Wonders (Oxford 2021) add up to about 800 pages combined. The two volumes of The Cult of Draupadī, Vol. 1, Mythologies: From Gingee to Kurukṣetra (Chicago 1988) and Vol. 2, On Hindu Ritual and the Goddess (Chicago 1991), are another 1000 pages or so. 
> 
> The two “rethinking” books, Rethinking India’s Oral and Classical Epics: Draupadī among Rajputs, Muslims, and Dalits (Chicago 1999) and Rethinking the Mahābhārata: A Reader’s Guide to the Education of the Dharma King (Chicago 2001), are about another 900 pages. 
> 
> Reading the Fifth Veda: Studies on the Mahābhārata and When the Goddess Was a Woman: Mahābhārata Ethnographies (Brill 2011), are about 1200 pages altogether. Dharma: Its Early History in Law, Religion, and Narrative (Oxford 2011) is about 700 pages. The two Freud books, Freud’s India and Freud’s Mahābhārata (Oxford 2018), are 600 combined pages. 
> 
> We get an estimated total of 5,200 pages (roughly the same size as Bibek Debroy’s ten-volume English translation of the Mahābhārata) if we stop this partial bibliography there. But Alf did not stop there, and was working on a book about Vyāsa as late as last year.
> 
> There won’t be another like Alf. He will be sorely missed by his students and his colleagues, but will never be forgotten as long as English readers still want to grapple with the immensity of India’s Great Epic. 
> 
> With condolences to his friends and family especially,
> 
> Brian
> 
> Assoc. Prof. Brian Collins
> (He/Him/His)
> Department Chair and Drs. Ram and Sushila Gawande Chair in Indian Religion and Philosophy
> Department of Classics and Religious Studies
> 234 Ellis Hall
> Ohio University
> Athens, Ohio
> 740-597-2103 (office)
> 
> 
> 
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