Daily pūjā: moralizing dharma in the BAPS Swaminarayan Hindu tradition

Each morning most members of BAPS Swaminarayan Sanstha, a transnational Hindu tradition, perform a personal devotional ritual called nityapūjā in which they engage in both somatic and cognitive practices for about half an hour. Drawing from the ethnographic data collected at the San Jose chapter of...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Nidān
Main Author: Bhatt, Kalpesh (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Univ. 2016
In: Nidān
Further subjects:B Ethics
B Modernity
B Transnationalism
B Swaminarayan Sanstha
B BAPS
B Ritual performance
Online Access: Volltext (kostenfrei)
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Summary:Each morning most members of BAPS Swaminarayan Sanstha, a transnational Hindu tradition, perform a personal devotional ritual called nityapūjā in which they engage in both somatic and cognitive practices for about half an hour. Drawing from the ethnographic data collected at the San Jose chapter of BAPS and mapping it onto a theory of normative ethics, this paper examines how such religious rituals help their practitioners negotiate secular concerns and conditions, come to terms with stress and anxiety, and make sense of their spiritual experiences. It proposes a ritual-moral model that provides a holistic approach to rethinking the time-worn category "dharma" as an ethical analytic in the context of how Hinduism is reimagined and lived in the 21st century. By exploring the relationship between Hindu devotional rituals and everyday ethics of their practitioners, this model demonstrates how ritually informed ethics create possibilities for exercising moral agency, developing constructive intersubjectivities, and managing sociocultural factors.
ISSN:2414-8636
Contains:Enthalten in: Nidān
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.58125/nidan.2016.2