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Gurus of Modern Yoga

Gurus of Modern Yoga is an edited 2014 collection of essays on some of the gurus (leaders) of modern yoga by the yoga scholars Mark Singleton and Ellen Goldberg.[1]

Gurus of Modern Yoga
AuthorMark Singleton, Ellen Goldberg
SubjectModern yoga
GenreEssay collection
Publication date
2014
Media typePaperback
Pages371
ISBN978-0199938728

The book has been broadly welcomed by critics as a necessary introduction to some of these figures, though some of them have regretted the book's lack of an evaluation of recent research on the place of the guru in modern yoga, or of an attempt to draw more general conclusions.

Book edit

Krishnamacharya foregrounded the use of āsana throughout his career, and his teaching shows a highly structured approach to this branch of practice. He used the term vinyāsa krama ("specially ordered steps") to describe a threefold scheme of preparation, main focus, and then release or restoration of balance. His initial experiments with vinyāsa krama seem to have begun in the early 1930s, with the series of dynamic āsana sequences that later came to be known as Ashtanga Vinyasa. In this style, the term vinyāsa indicates the repeated sequence of "jump back", from a posture, partial, or complete sūryanamaskar (known as half or full vinyāsa, respectively), and "jump forward" to the next posture.

Mark Singleton and Tara Fraser, "T. Krishnamacharya, Father of Modern Yoga", in Gurus of Modern Yoga


Gurus of Modern Yoga was published in 2014 by Oxford University Press in paperback. Each chapter is illustrated with one or two monochrome photographs of the guru that it describes. After an introduction by the editors, Mark Singleton and Ellen Goldberg, the book has six parts, each consisting of edited essays from invited experts:[1]

Part One: Key Figures in Early Twentieth-Century Yoga
Part Two: The Lineages of T. Krishnamacharya
Part Three: Tantra Based Gurus
Part Four: Bhaktiyoga
Part Five: Technology
  • Engineering an Artful Practice: On Jaggi Vasudev's ISHA Yoga and Sri Sri Ravi Shakar's Art of Living, by Joanne Punzo Waghorne
  • Online Bhakti in a Modern Guru Organization, by Maya Warrier
Part Six: Nation-Builders
  • Eknath Ranade, Gurus and Jivanvratis (life-workers): Vivekananda Kendra's Promotion of the Yoga Way of Life, by Gwilym Beckerlegge
  • Swami Ramdev: Modern Yoga Revolutionary, by Stuart Sarbacker

Reception edit

 
Jaggi Vasudev, one of the gurus better-known to followers than to scholars before the publication of Gurus of Modern Yoga[2]

Miriam Y. Perkins, reviewing Gurus of Modern Yoga for Spiritus: A Journal of Christian Spirituality, writes that the book provides a "compendium of multiple and influential yoga philosophies and their spiritual founders" with a "sound and balanced entry into this complexity and helpful orientation to the dynamics of popular spiritual seeking through related practices."[3] She finds its inclusion of women gurus "an important contribution".[3]

Jeffrey D. Long, in his review essay in the Religious Studies Review, calls the volume "outstanding".[4]

Knut A. Jacobsen, reviewing the book for Numen, noted that the book's gurus developed their own types of yoga for a "global spiritual market", becoming "world teachers with communities of followers" in numerous countries. Jacobsen writes that modern postural yoga differs from gymnastics in having gurus, one aspect of its Indian heritage; he praises Dermot Killingley's account of Vivekananda as "a guru in the modern sense" with "a large but ill-defined following". On the account of Krishnamacharya by Singleton and Tara Fraser, he comments that the validity of their label "father of modern yoga" depends on what one means by yoga, but that it indicates the fact that by the 2000s, most "modern transnational yoga" is postural, with a large debt to Krishnamacharya; the account uncovers the "many layers of facts and fiction" in the often hagiographical tales of Krishnamacharya's life.[5]

Beatrix Hauser's review in Asian Ethnology notes the strengths of the book, with contributions from well-known experts, and its weaknesses, such as that it does not analyse recent work on guru faith or new religious movements, and the contributions vary in theoretical basis and scope. Accordingly she finds it hard to draw a general conclusion, though she calls the collection "highly stimulating". In her view, the most important aspect of the book is that it "relinks the debate on modern postural yoga in the West to its Indian parallels and counterparts, showing also its continuum with notions of healing and health in recent forms of bhakti yoga". She regrets that the book does not draw out conclusions on what the new position and role of the guru actually is.[6]

Kimberley Pingatore, reviewing the work for Religion, calls it a vast and fascinating collection, illustrating "the dynamic and varied conceptualizations that comprise the term guru within the context of modern yoga". She notes that the authors characterise their gurus as often having themselves sought a cure for their childhood illnesses in yoga, i.e. the benefits of yoga would be physical, "not necessarily immortality or enlightenment", though these could be linked.[7]

Philip Deslippe, in his review in Nova Religio, calls the book a "substantial contribution", presenting the guru as "both a global ambassador and popularizer of modern yoga, and also a figure that has undergone tremendous alterations as part of yoga’s global ascent to prevalence and popularity". In his view, the accounts of Swami Ramdev, Sri Ravi Shankar and Jaggi Vasudev are much-needed, as these hugely popular leaders had been little studied; but the focus on exceptional individuals made it hard for readers to see "the larger structural shifts that set the stage for them to appear".[2]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Singleton & Goldberg 2014.
  2. ^ a b Deslippe, Philip (2018). "Mythical Posturing: Hagiography, History, and Scholarly Judgment in Recent Works on Modern Yoga and Hinduism in America". Nova Religio. 21 (3): 103–109. doi:10.1525/nr.2018.21.3.103.
  3. ^ a b Perkins, Miriam Y. (2015). "Gurus of Modern Yoga ed. by Mark Singleton and Ellen Goldberg (review)". Spiritus: A Journal of Christian Spirituality. 15 (1): 143–145. doi:10.1353/scs.2015.0023. S2CID 143327933.
  4. ^ "Religious Studies Review". Religious Studies Review. 40 (1): 65–67. 27 February 2014. doi:10.1111/rsr.12118. ISSN 0319-485X.
  5. ^ Jacobsen, Knut A. (7 September 2015). "Gurus of Modern Yoga, written by Mark Singleton and Ellen Goldberg". Numen. 62 (5–6). Brill: 673–676. doi:10.1163/15685276-12341401. ISSN 0029-5973.
  6. ^ Hauser, Beatrix (2016). ""Mark Singleton and Ellen Goldberg, eds., Gurus of Modern Yoga"" (PDF). Asian Ethnology. 75 (1): 227. doi:10.18874/ae.75.1.13. (PDF) from the original on 16 August 2021.
  7. ^ Pingatore, Kimberley (11 September 2015). "Gurus of Modern Yoga, edited by Mark Singleton and Ellen Goldberg, New York: Oxford University Press, 2014, v + 386 pp., ISBN 978-0-19-993870-4, US$99.00 (Hardcover); ISBN 978-0-19-993872-8, US$29.95 (Paperback)". Religion. 46 (1). Informa UK Limited: 124–127. doi:10.1080/0048721x.2015.1076301. ISSN 0048-721X. S2CID 146932091.

Sources edit

gurus, modern, yoga, edited, 2014, collection, essays, some, gurus, leaders, modern, yoga, yoga, scholars, mark, singleton, ellen, goldberg, authormark, singleton, ellen, goldbergsubjectmodern, yogagenreessay, collectionpublication, date2014media, typepaperbac. Gurus of Modern Yoga is an edited 2014 collection of essays on some of the gurus leaders of modern yoga by the yoga scholars Mark Singleton and Ellen Goldberg 1 Gurus of Modern YogaAuthorMark Singleton Ellen GoldbergSubjectModern yogaGenreEssay collectionPublication date2014Media typePaperbackPages371ISBN978 0199938728 The book has been broadly welcomed by critics as a necessary introduction to some of these figures though some of them have regretted the book s lack of an evaluation of recent research on the place of the guru in modern yoga or of an attempt to draw more general conclusions Contents 1 Book 2 Reception 3 References 4 SourcesBook editFurther information Modern yoga gurus Krishnamacharya foregrounded the use of asana throughout his career and his teaching shows a highly structured approach to this branch of practice He used the term vinyasa krama specially ordered steps to describe a threefold scheme of preparation main focus and then release or restoration of balance His initial experiments with vinyasa krama seem to have begun in the early 1930s with the series of dynamic asana sequences that later came to be known as Ashtanga Vinyasa In this style the term vinyasa indicates the repeated sequence of jump back from a posture partial or complete suryanamaskar known as half or full vinyasa respectively and jump forward to the next posture Mark Singleton and Tara Fraser T Krishnamacharya Father of Modern Yoga in Gurus of Modern Yoga Gurus of Modern Yoga was published in 2014 by Oxford University Press in paperback Each chapter is illustrated with one or two monochrome photographs of the guru that it describes After an introduction by the editors Mark Singleton and Ellen Goldberg the book has six parts each consisting of edited essays from invited experts 1 Part One Key Figures in Early Twentieth Century Yoga Manufacturing Yogis Swami Vivekananda as a Yoga Teacher by Dermot Killingley Remembering Sri Aurobindo and the Mother The Forgotten Lineage of Integral Yoga by Ann Gleig and Charles I Flores Shri Yogendra Magic Modernity and the Burden of the Middle Class Yogi by Joseph S Alter Part Two The Lineages of T Krishnamacharya T Krishnamacharya Father of Modern Yoga by Mark Singleton and Tara Fraser Authorized by Sri K Pattabhi Jois The Role of Parampara and Lineage in Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga by Jean Byrne B K S Iyengar as a Yoga Teacher and Yoga Guru by Frederick M Smith and Joan White The Institutionalization of the Yoga Tradition Gurus B K S Iyengar and Yogini Sunita in Britain by Suzanne Newcombe Part Three Tantra Based Gurus Swami Krpalvananda The Man Behind Kripalu Yoga by Ellen Goldberg Muktananda Entrepreneurial Godman Tantric Hero by Andrea R Jain Stretching toward the Sacred John Friend and Anusara Yoga by Lola Williamson Part Four Bhaktiyoga Svaminarayana Bhaktiyoga and the Aksarabhraman Guru by Hanna H Kim Sathya Sai Baba and the Repertoire of Yoga by Smriti Srinivas Part Five Technology Engineering an Artful Practice On Jaggi Vasudev s ISHA Yoga and Sri Sri Ravi Shakar s Art of Living by Joanne Punzo Waghorne Online Bhakti in a Modern Guru Organization by Maya Warrier Part Six Nation Builders Eknath Ranade Gurus and Jivanvratis life workers Vivekananda Kendra s Promotion of the Yoga Way of Life by Gwilym Beckerlegge Swami Ramdev Modern Yoga Revolutionary by Stuart SarbackerReception edit nbsp Jaggi Vasudev one of the gurus better known to followers than to scholars before the publication of Gurus of Modern Yoga 2 Miriam Y Perkins reviewing Gurus of Modern Yoga for Spiritus A Journal of Christian Spirituality writes that the book provides a compendium of multiple and influential yoga philosophies and their spiritual founders with a sound and balanced entry into this complexity and helpful orientation to the dynamics of popular spiritual seeking through related practices 3 She finds its inclusion of women gurus an important contribution 3 Jeffrey D Long in his review essay in the Religious Studies Review calls the volume outstanding 4 Knut A Jacobsen reviewing the book for Numen noted that the book s gurus developed their own types of yoga for a global spiritual market becoming world teachers with communities of followers in numerous countries Jacobsen writes that modern postural yoga differs from gymnastics in having gurus one aspect of its Indian heritage he praises Dermot Killingley s account of Vivekananda as a guru in the modern sense with a large but ill defined following On the account of Krishnamacharya by Singleton and Tara Fraser he comments that the validity of their label father of modern yoga depends on what one means by yoga but that it indicates the fact that by the 2000s most modern transnational yoga is postural with a large debt to Krishnamacharya the account uncovers the many layers of facts and fiction in the often hagiographical tales of Krishnamacharya s life 5 Beatrix Hauser s review in Asian Ethnology notes the strengths of the book with contributions from well known experts and its weaknesses such as that it does not analyse recent work on guru faith or new religious movements and the contributions vary in theoretical basis and scope Accordingly she finds it hard to draw a general conclusion though she calls the collection highly stimulating In her view the most important aspect of the book is that it relinks the debate on modern postural yoga in the West to its Indian parallels and counterparts showing also its continuum with notions of healing and health in recent forms of bhakti yoga She regrets that the book does not draw out conclusions on what the new position and role of the guru actually is 6 Kimberley Pingatore reviewing the work for Religion calls it a vast and fascinating collection illustrating the dynamic and varied conceptualizations that comprise the term guru within the context of modern yoga She notes that the authors characterise their gurus as often having themselves sought a cure for their childhood illnesses in yoga i e the benefits of yoga would be physical not necessarily immortality or enlightenment though these could be linked 7 Philip Deslippe in his review in Nova Religio calls the book a substantial contribution presenting the guru as both a global ambassador and popularizer of modern yoga and also a figure that has undergone tremendous alterations as part of yoga s global ascent to prevalence and popularity In his view the accounts of Swami Ramdev Sri Ravi Shankar and Jaggi Vasudev are much needed as these hugely popular leaders had been little studied but the focus on exceptional individuals made it hard for readers to see the larger structural shifts that set the stage for them to appear 2 References edit a b Singleton amp Goldberg 2014 a b Deslippe Philip 2018 Mythical Posturing Hagiography History and Scholarly Judgment in Recent Works on Modern Yoga and Hinduism in America Nova Religio 21 3 103 109 doi 10 1525 nr 2018 21 3 103 a b Perkins Miriam Y 2015 Gurus of Modern Yoga ed by Mark Singleton and Ellen Goldberg review Spiritus A Journal of Christian Spirituality 15 1 143 145 doi 10 1353 scs 2015 0023 S2CID 143327933 Religious Studies Review Religious Studies Review 40 1 65 67 27 February 2014 doi 10 1111 rsr 12118 ISSN 0319 485X Jacobsen Knut A 7 September 2015 Gurus of Modern Yoga written by Mark Singleton and Ellen Goldberg Numen 62 5 6 Brill 673 676 doi 10 1163 15685276 12341401 ISSN 0029 5973 Hauser Beatrix 2016 Mark Singleton and Ellen Goldberg eds Gurus of Modern Yoga PDF Asian Ethnology 75 1 227 doi 10 18874 ae 75 1 13 Archived PDF from the original on 16 August 2021 Pingatore Kimberley 11 September 2015 Gurus of Modern Yoga edited by Mark Singleton and Ellen Goldberg New York Oxford University Press 2014 v 386 pp ISBN 978 0 19 993870 4 US 99 00 Hardcover ISBN 978 0 19 993872 8 US 29 95 Paperback Religion 46 1 Informa UK Limited 124 127 doi 10 1080 0048721x 2015 1076301 ISSN 0048 721X S2CID 146932091 Sources editSingleton Mark Goldberg Ellen 2014 Gurus of Modern Yoga Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199938728 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gurus of Modern Yoga amp oldid 1192320638, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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