Category: Academic

OCHS Academic Director publishes on Importance of Religion

OCHS Academic Director publishes on Importance of Religion

OCHS Academic Director publishes on Importance of Religion

The Importance of Religion argues for the central importance of religion in modern times and how it provides people with meaning to their lives and guides them in their everyday moral choices. Professor Flood argues that modern religions do not just represent passive notions about the nature of reality but are active and inspirational: they show us ways of living, dying, choosing a good life and inhabiting the world.

Professor Flood discusses the nature and meaning of religion and spirituality, and religion’s relationship with politics, science, evolutionary biology, human rights, culture, humanism and more.

The title is an excellent addition to the body of publishing that has sprung from the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. It has been well-received by scholars of religion including Gavin D’Costa of the University of Bristol: ‘Flood presents a thesis about “religion” that is provocative, irenic, learned and wide-ranging. His interdisciplinary intervention is an elegant challenge to those who think religion is dead or dying. It is a sensitive exploration of religion as the textual and ritual generator of meaning.’

Professor Flood has been the Academic Director of OCHS since October 2005. In 2008 he was granted the title of Professor of Hindu Studies and Comparative Religion from the University of Oxford.

OCHS alumnus awarded

OCHS alumnus awarded

OCHS alumnus awarded

Every year in their January issue, Choice a magazine representing the 35,000 libraries who are part of the American Academic Libraries Association, publishes a list of Outstanding Academic Titles that they reviewed during the previous year.

‘Theodor writes with a fine mind and a great heart, both of which are essential for delving into this ancient work’s profound teachings,’ Choice magazine commented in its review.

Theodor’s book presents the full text of the Bhagavad Gita in a new translation, divided into sections, and accompanied by in-depth commentary. It aims to make the Gita accessible and understandable to a wide variety of modern readers.

OCHS Conference 2011: The Shakta Traditions

OCHS Conference 2011: The Shakta Traditions

OCHS Conference 2011: The Shakta Traditions

We now have a third conference to add to our list of achievements. The Sakta conference which took place on 10–11 September 2011 was highly successful with over fifty participants and twelve specialist scholars.

The conference was held in collaboration with the section for the Study of Religion, Aarhus University and the project leaders were Professor Gavin Flood (OCHS) and Bjarne Wernicke Olesen (Aarhus University). The Nehru Centre very kindly provided funding for the conference.
 
The main aim of the conference was to present an interdisciplinary survey of Sakta history, practice and doctrine in its diversity as well as to convey something of the distinctive Sakta world-view that and sets ‘Saktism’ apart from other South Asian religious traditions. Headway in this field will be of great value for the future study of religion in South Asia.
 
The conference addressed the questions of Shakti from a number of perspectives: a text-historical or philological perspective; an anthropological perspective on contemporary practice; a doctrinal or theological perspective on theological reflection based on the textual material that has been established to date; an art-historical angle; as well as a perspective of the study of religion. 
 
We are currently working on getting the material presented at the conference ready for publication. The research from our first Shivdasani Conference “Archaeology and Text: The Temple in South Asia”, has been published and the research from our 2nd Shivdasani Conference “Thinking inside the Box: The Concept of a Category in Indian Philosophy”, is in the process of being published. 
Sakta Conference Participants