I am delighted that the topic of science-fiction, my favorite genre, has come up on this list!
Michael, the Gāyatrī mantra, or a version of it, is indeed used in the opening credits of the re-envisioned Battlestar Galactica (a series which is a huge improvement on the original, on which I grew up in the seventies, but for which I still have a sentimental fondness). The word pracodayāt is mispronounced as prakodayāt, presumably because the creators of the series were not aware of how the unaspirated 'c' is pronounced in the standard international transliteration system for Indic languages. But it's clearly an attempt to sing the Gāyatrī mantra.
The series is rich with fascinating themes, including a problematizing of monotheism. The mainstream human culture depicted in the series has multiple deities, and other interesting resonances with non-Abrahamic faiths.
Though it diverges from the topic fo the Gāyatrī mantra, others have posted on relations between aspects of Hindu thought and ideas found in popular sci-fi series. My own humble contributions to this discourse are as follows:
A piece on Hindu themes in Star Wars. It's the second part of a two-part series, the first being on Hindu themes in the music of George Harrison and the Beatles:
| | Hindu Themes in Western Popular Culture: A Tale of Two Georges, Part TwoBy Jeffrey D. Long Introduction In the first part of this two-part series on the ‘two Georges’–Harrison and Luca... |
|
|
A live early draft of the previous article, presented at the Vedanta Society of New York in May, 2017, and called 'The Yoga of Yoda.' I have updated and expanded both of these as I have given them repeatedly in various speaking venues:
| | The Yoga of Yoda by Dr. Jeffery D. LongGuest Speaker Dr. Jeffery D. Long speaks on “The Yoga of Yoda” at the Vedanta Society of New York on May 28, 201... |
|
|
I owe the title, 'The Yoga of Yoda,' to Swami Sarvapriyananda, of the Vedanta Society of New York. He knew this was a favorite topic of mine and was the person who first encouraged me to speak and write about it.
A further developed series of reflections on this topic are going to be in my forthcoming Hinduism in America: A Convergence of Worlds, due to be published later this year by Bloomsbury.
Though Game of Thrones is technically not sci-fi, but fantasy, I have a piece on Hindu themes in Game of Thrones that is also going to be in a forthcoming edited volume by Matthew Brake on religion in Game of Thrones.
May the Force be with you!
Jeff
Dr. Jeffery D. Long
Professor of Religion and Asian Studies
Elizabethtown College
Elizabethtown, PA
Series Editor, Explorations in Indic Traditions: Theological, Ethical, and Philosophical
Lexington Books
"One who makes a habit of prayer and meditation will easily overcome all difficulties and remain calm and unruffled in the midst of the trials of life." (Holy Mother Sarada Devi)
"We are a way for the Cosmos to know itself." (Carl Sagan)