Dear list members
I would like to make you aware of the panel “Dynamics of Female Agency in Religious Settings in India” and encourage you to submit papers there.
Dynamics of Female Agency in Religious Settings in India
https://ecsas2020.univie.ac.at/panels/v1zar/
The panel shall serve as a forum for discussion of dynamics of female religious and ritual leadership in the Indian religious traditions. The aim
is to facilitate conversations between scholars studying specific cultural, historical and geographical situations in which women acquire such agency.
id: v1zar
Convenors:
· Vinita Chandra
Indian Institute of Technology (BHU) (Varanasi, India)
· Dr. Ute Hüsken South Asia Institute, Heidelberg University (Heidelberg, Germany)
Long Abstract
In most mainstream religious traditions, women are excluded from positions of religious and ritual leadership. Recently this situation has started
to change: in an increasing number of contexts, women can and do undergo monastic and priestly education; they can receive ordination/initiation as Buddhist nuns and Hindu priestesses; and they are accepted as ascetic religious leaders. Still these processes
largely take place outside of traditional religious institutions. Yet women are starting to establish new religious trends, occupying positions of religious leadership on par with men. In some cases, this process takes place in collaboration with male counterparts
of the women leaders, in others against their will. In traditional settings, notably the gender of the female religious leaders constitutes the new element, which may be rejected, embraced, or accommodated. This panel sets out to look at the historical background,
contemporary trajectories, and impact of the emergence of new powerful female agencies in these conservative religious traditions – a change, which paradoxically takes place while women’s rights in modern and liberal settings are being curtailed. Which strategies
do the women employ that allow them to integrate in a tradition that excludes them? Who are the agents behind these processes? Who decides which elements of text and practice are essential and which are subject to negotiation? What is appropriated, or rejected
by the new actors? How do the processes of negotiation unfold? What are the competing agendas of the diverse stakeholders, including men involved in the processes? We welcome papers around these, but also other questions on the theme
Prof. Dr. Ute Hüsken
Vice Dean, Faculty of Arts
Head of Department, Cultural and Religious History of South Asia
Heidelberg University
Voßstrasse 2, Building 4130, Room 130.02.15
69115 Heidelberg
Germany
Phone: +49-6221-54 15261
Email: huesken@uni-heidelberg.de