1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910809686103321

Autore

Ferrari Fabrizio M.

Titolo

Religion, devotion and medicine in north India : the healing power of Śītalā / / Fabrizio M. Ferrari

Pubbl/distr/stampa

New York : , : Bloomsbury Academic, , 2015

ISBN

1-4725-9872-5

1-4411-6380-8

1-4725-9456-8

1-4725-9871-7

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (247 p.)

Classificazione

REL000000REL032020

Disciplina

294.5/2114

Soggetti

Hinduism - India, North - Rituals

Śītalā (Hindu deity) - Cult - India, North

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Description based upon print version of record.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

Acknowledgements -- Note on transliteration -- Abbreviations -- Months in North India -- Introduction -- Chapter 1. Śītalā, the Cold Mother -- Chapter 2. Visions of the goddess : The iconography of Śītalā -- Chapter 3. Hosting Mā, feeding Mā. Controversies around Śītalāpūjā -- Chapter 4. The Smallpox Myth and the Creation of the Goddess of Smallpox -- Chapter 5. The Legacy of Śītalā -- Concluding Reflections -- Appendix A. Śrīśītalāsaptamīvratakathā (ŚVK 9-14)pp. 175-178 -- Appendix B. Śrīśītalāsaptamīvrata of Skandapurāṇa (VR 310-311) -- Appendix C. Śītalāsaptamīvratakathā of Bhaviṣyapurāṇa (VR 310-313) -- Appendix D. Śītalāpūjāpaddhati of Picchilātantra -- Bibliography -- Index.

Sommario/riassunto

"This volume examines notions of health and illness in North Indian devotional culture, with particular attention paid to the worship of the goddess Sitala, the Cold Lady. Consistently portrayed in colonial and postcolonial literature as the ambiguous 'smallpox goddess', Sitala is here discussed as a protector of children and women, a portrayal that emerges from textual sources as well as material culture. The eradication of smallpox did not pose a threat to Sitala and her worship. She continues to be an extremely popular goddess. Religion, Devotion



and Medicine in North India critically examines the rise and affirmation of the 'smallpox myth' in India and beyond, and explains how Indian narratives, ritual texts and devotional songs have celebrated Sitala as a loving mother who protects her children from the effects, and the fear, of poxes, fevers and infantile disorders but also all sorts of new threats (such as global pandemics, addictions and environmental catastrophes). The book explores a wide range of ritual and devotional practices, including scheduled festivals, songs, vows, pageants, austerities, possession, animal sacrifices and various forms of offering. Built on extensive fieldwork and a close textual analysis of sources in Sanskrit and vernacular languages (Hindi, Bhojpuri and Bengali) as well as on a rich bibliography on the struggle against smallpox in colonial and post-colonial India, the book reflects on the ambiguous nature of Sitala as a phenomenon largely dependent on the enduring fascination with the exotic, and the horrific, that has pervaded public renditions of Indian culture in indigenous fiction, colonial reports, medical literature and now global culture. To aid study, the volume includes images, web links, appendixes and a filmography."--Bloomsbury Publishing.