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Book cover for Gurus and Media open access

Publication date: 28 September 2023

DOI: https://doi.org/10.14324/111.9781800085541

Number of illustrations: 55

Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License

Gurus and Media

Sound, image, machine, text and the digital

Jacob Copeman (Editor),  Arkotong Longkumer (Editor),  Koonal Duggal (Editor)

Gurus and Media is the first book dedicated to media and mediation in domains of public guruship and devotion. Illuminating the mediatisation of guruship and the guru-isation of media, it bridges the gap between scholarship on gurus and the disciplines of media and visual culture studies. It investigates guru iconographies in and across various time periods and also the distinctive ways in which diverse gurus engage with and inhabit different forms of media: statuary, games, print publications, photographs, portraiture, films, machines, social media, bodies, words, graffiti, dolls, sound, verse, tombs and more.

The book’s interdisciplinary chapters advance, both conceptually and ethnographically, our understanding of the function of media in the dramatic production of guruship, and reflect on the corporate branding of gurus and on mediated guruship as a series of aesthetic traps for the captivation of devotees and others. They show how different media can further enliven the complex plurality of guruship, for instance in instantiating notions of ‘absent-present’ guruship and demonstrating the mutual mediation of gurus, caste and Hindutva.

Throughout, the book foregrounds contested visions of the guru in the development of devotional publics and pluriform guruship across time and space. Thinking through the guru’s many media entanglements in a single place, the book contributes new insights to the study of South Asian religions and to the study of mediation more broadly.

Praise for Gurus and Media

‘Sight, sound, image, narrative, representation and performance in the complex world of gurus are richly illuminated and deeply theorised in this outstanding volume. The immensely important, but hitherto under-explored, visual and aural dimensions of guru-ship across several religious traditions have received path-breaking and wide-ranging treatment by best-known experts on the subject.’
Nandini Gooptu, University of Oxford

Gurus and Media casts subtle light on a phenomenon that too often shines so brightly that it is hard to see. This collection is a tremendously rich resource for anyone trying to make sense of that ambiguous zone where authority appears at once as seduction and as salvation, as comfort and as terror.’
William Mazzarella, University of Chicago

‘This remarkable collection uses the figure of the mass-mediated guru to throw light on how modern Hindu mobilization generates a highly diverse set of religious charismatics in India. Because of the diversity of the contributors to this volume, the book is also a moveable feast of cases, methods and cultural styles in a major cultural region.’
Arjun Appadurai, Emeritus Professor of Media, Culture and Communication, New York University

‘Gurus and Media is an engaging and approachable edition for readerships across disciplines’
Reading Religion

‘one will be pleasantly surprised by the various perspectives on the Vedic concept of a guru and how it has mutated and grown and produced so many avatars’
The Tribune (India)

List of figures
Notes on contributors
Acknowledgements

Gurus and media: an introduction
Jacob Copeman, Koonal Duggal and Arkotong Longkumer

1 The sonic guru: Rewben Mashangva, folk, roots and the blues
Arkotong Longkumer

2 ‘Non-human gurus’: yoga dolls, online avatars and meaningful narratives
Patrick S.D. McCartney and Diego Lourenço

3 Governing with a lockdown beard: the COVID-19 crisis as a laboratory for Narendra Modi’s Hindutva
David Landau and Nina Rageth

4 ‘Immortal Gurus of Bhārata’. the social biography of a contemporary image
Raphaël Voix

5 Languages of longing: Indian gurus, Western disciples and practices of letter-writing
Somak Biswas

6 Śabda-Guru: conflicts of guru-ship, mediational phenomenology and Śabda-philosophy in Sikhism
Arvind-Pal Singh Mandair

7 Hacking God. Ganesh Yourself, an incarnation experiment in human divine circuitry
Emmanuel Grimaud

8 Flooding the Web: absence-presence and the media strategies of Nithyananda’s digital empire
Amanda Lucia

9 When God eies: multi-mediation, the elsewhere and crypto futurity in a global guru movement
Tulasi Srinivas

10 Envisioning silence: Ramana Maharshi and the rise of Advaitic photography
Yagna Nag Chowdhuri

11 ‘Christ the guru’: artistic representations of Jesus Christ in South India and their mediated notions of guru-ness
E. Dawson Varughese

12 The total guru: film star guru-ship in the time of Hindutva Jacob Copeman and Koonal Duggal

13 Doing seeing: televised yoga, consumption and religious nationalism in neo-liberal India
Srirupa Bhattacharya

Index

DOI: 10.14324/111.9781800085541

Number of illustrations: 55

Publication date: 28 September 2023

PDF ISBN: 9781800085541

EPUB ISBN: 9781800085572

Hardback ISBN: 9781800085565

Paperback ISBN: 9781800085558

Jacob Copeman (Editor)

Jacob Copeman is Research Professor, University of Santiago de Compostela, Spain, and Distinguished Researcher (Oportunius).

Arkotong Longkumer (Editor)

Arkotong Longkumer is Senior Lecturer in Modern Asia at the University of Edinburgh, and Senior Research Fellow at the Kohima Institute, Nagaland.

Koonal Duggal (Editor)

Koonal Duggal is Research Fellow in Social Anthropology at the University of Edinburgh.

‘Gurus and Media is an engaging and approachable edition for readerships across disciplines’
Reading Religion

‘one will be pleasantly surprised by the various perspectives on the Vedic concept of a guru and how it has mutated and grown and produced so many avatars’
The Tribune (India)

‘This remarkable collection uses the figure of the mass-mediated guru to throw light on how modern Hindu mobilization generates a highly diverse set of religious charismatics in India. Because of the diversity of the contributors to this volume, the book is also a moveable feast of cases, methods and cultural styles in a major cultural region.’
Arjun Appadurai, Emeritus Professor of Media, Culture and Communication, New York University

Gurus and Media casts subtle light on a phenomenon that too often shines so brightly that it is hard to see. This collection is a tremendously rich resource for anyone trying to make sense of that ambiguous zone where authority appears at once as seduction and as salvation, as comfort and as terror.’
William Mazzarella, University of Chicago

‘Sight, sound, image, narrative, representation and performance in the complex world of gurus are richly illuminated and deeply theorised in this outstanding volume. The immensely important, but hitherto under-explored, visual and aural dimensions of guru-ship across several religious traditions have received path-breaking and wide-ranging treatment by best-known experts on the subject.’
Nandini Gooptu, University of Oxford

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