Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Tables and Figures
- Foreword
- Preface
- Introduction: Locating Devotion in Dissent and Dissent in Devotion A Thematic Overview
- Introduction
- 1 Parsing of Devotion and Dissent
- 2 Dissent and Protest in Early Indian Buddhism with Special Reference to Devadatta
- 3 Devotion and Dissent in Hunter's Bhakti
- 4 Devotion and Dissent
- 5 Dissent Within
- 6 Women in Love
- 7 Dissenting Voices
- 8 Dissent in Kabir and the Kabir Panth
- 9 Devotion and Dissent of Punjabi Dalit Sant Poets
- 10 Protest and Counter-protest
- 11 Fakirs of Bengal
- 12 Music in Chishti Sufism
- 13 Dissenting the Dominant
- 14 Devotion and Dissent within the Catholic Church in Late Colonial Bengal
- 15 Narratives of Travel, Voices of Dissent and Attacks on the Colonial Church Fabric of the European Missionaries
- 16 Devotion and Dissent in Narayana Guru
- 17 Sree Narayana Guru's Idioms of the Spiritual and the Worldly
- Contributors
- Index
4 - Devotion and Dissent
from Introduction: Locating Devotion in Dissent and Dissent in Devotion A Thematic Overview
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 October 2014
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Tables and Figures
- Foreword
- Preface
- Introduction: Locating Devotion in Dissent and Dissent in Devotion A Thematic Overview
- Introduction
- 1 Parsing of Devotion and Dissent
- 2 Dissent and Protest in Early Indian Buddhism with Special Reference to Devadatta
- 3 Devotion and Dissent in Hunter's Bhakti
- 4 Devotion and Dissent
- 5 Dissent Within
- 6 Women in Love
- 7 Dissenting Voices
- 8 Dissent in Kabir and the Kabir Panth
- 9 Devotion and Dissent of Punjabi Dalit Sant Poets
- 10 Protest and Counter-protest
- 11 Fakirs of Bengal
- 12 Music in Chishti Sufism
- 13 Dissenting the Dominant
- 14 Devotion and Dissent within the Catholic Church in Late Colonial Bengal
- 15 Narratives of Travel, Voices of Dissent and Attacks on the Colonial Church Fabric of the European Missionaries
- 16 Devotion and Dissent in Narayana Guru
- 17 Sree Narayana Guru's Idioms of the Spiritual and the Worldly
- Contributors
- Index
Summary
Amongst one of the greatest religious personalities of India, Ramanuja has an enduring reputation of a social reformer who dared to defy the Brahmanical orthodoxy of his times by democratizing temple worship for the marginalized castes of society. One of the radical steps he is supposed to have taken in this direction was to shout out the dvaya mantra, exclusively meant for the brahmins, from the top of the temple tower at Tirukkottiyur so that everyone, irrespective of their caste status, could hear, learn and recite it. Thus, such occurrences in the life of Ramanuja have delineated him as a rebel saint who dissented against the Brahmanical convention, caste hierarchy and political order of the day, and simultaneously evolved the Vishishtadvaita exegesis, developing a structure of devotion that involved large sections of society in the attainment of salvation and direct accessibility to the divine.
Hence, the association of Ramanuja with dissent and devotion has been the central belief of the Shrivaishnava community of South India, for whom Ramanuja was the founder, who organized the community and gave it an exegetical basis through the Vishishtadvaita Vedanta. Thus, one knows about Ramanuja's life, his beliefs, his catholicity and compassion. We know what his biographers tell us: in this case, the hagiographies whose authors were located in a particular context and, through Ramanuja's attitude of dissent and devotion, were putting forward a certain vision for the Shrivaishnava community and attempting to create a particular kind of collective consciousness within the community.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Devotion and Dissent in Indian History , pp. 74 - 97Publisher: Foundation BooksPrint publication year: 2014