Document Type
Article
Publication Date
Summer 6-12-2013
Journal / Book Title
Ethnography
Abstract
This article focuses on ‘dread’ in religious practice in contemporary India. It argues that the dread of everyday existence, which is as salient in a biographical temporality as it pervades the phenomenal environment, connects and transfers between religious practices and everyday life in India for the marginalized masses. For such dread, dominant liberal discourses, such as those of the nation, economy, or ego-centric performance, have neither the patience nor the forms to represent, perform, and abreact. Formulated in dialogue with critical theory, phenomenology, and psychoanalytic theory, this article conceives of religious practices in continuum with the economic, social, ethical, and political realms, and the repressions thereof. Focused on a rapidly expanding religious movement in India, it challenges normative discourses of religious practitioners as fundamentalists or reactionaries, and strives to extend the imperatives of recent critical urban ethnography into the domain of religious practice.
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/1466138113490606
MSU Digital Commons Citation
Singh, Vikash, "Religious practice and the phenomenology of everyday violence in contemporary India" (2013). Department of Sociology Faculty Scholarship and Creative Works. 18.
https://digitalcommons.montclair.edu/sociology-facpubs/18
Published Citation
Singh, Vikash. "Religious practice and the phenomenology of everyday violence in contemporary India." Ethnography 15, no. 4 (2014): 469-492.
Included in
Community-Based Learning Commons, Community-Based Research Commons, Ethics in Religion Commons, Hindu Studies Commons, Islamic Studies Commons, Migration Studies Commons, Other Religion Commons, Other Sociology Commons, Place and Environment Commons, Quantitative, Qualitative, Comparative, and Historical Methodologies Commons, Regional Sociology Commons, Religious Education Commons, Sociology of Religion Commons