Found in Translation: Revisiting the Bhagavad-gita in the Twenty-first Century A Review Article

2010 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 258-269 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Valpey
Acorn ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 75-99
Author(s):  
Douglas Allen ◽  
Sanjay Lal ◽  
Karsten Struhl ◽  

In this author-meets-critics dialogue, Douglas Allen, author of argues that Gandhi-informed philosophies and practices, when creatively reformulated and applied, are essential for developing positions that are ethical, nonviolent, truthful, and sustainable, providing resources and hope for confronting our ‘Gandhi after 9/11’ crises. Critics Sanjay Lal and Karsten Struhl applaud Allen’s demonstration that Gandhi’s nonviolence is serious and broadly adaptable to the twenty-first century. Yet, Lal poses two philosophical challenges, arguing first that the nonviolent message of the Bhagavad Gita is perhaps more essential than Allen allows. Second, Lal raises difficulties involved in placing the needs of others first, especially in response to terrorism. Struhl wonders if the Gita is not more violent than Gandhi or Allen represent it to be. Struhl also questions whether relative claims are always resolved in the direction of Absolute Truth, as Gandhi and Allen assert. Finally, critic Struhl wonders how we can restrain institutions from escalating cycles of violence once we grant Gandhi-based exceptions that would allow violence to suppress terrorism. Against Lal’s objections, Allen defends a more open-ended reading of the Gita and agrees that our service to the needs of others cannot go so far as to embrace their terrorism. In response to Struhl, Allen agrees that there are indeed problems with a nonviolent reading of the Gita, but there are resources to support Gandhi’s view. Likewise, regarding relations between our limited truths and the Absolute, Allen grants that Struhl has identified real problems but that a final defense is possible, especially when we consider motivational factors. As for limiting cycles of violence, Allen argues that a Gandhi-informed use of violence implies considerations that limit its use.


2018 ◽  
Vol 108 ◽  
pp. 156-170 ◽  
Author(s):  
Penelope J. Goodman

A rash of new festivals, a fashion for calendars and a renamed month all attest to the strength of anniversary culture in the Augustan era, and to Augustus’ own facility for capitalising upon it. We can safely assume that he would have understood, and perhaps even anticipated, that the bimillennium of his death might be commemorated. Whether he would quite have expected the exhibitions, conferences and publications with which twenty-first-century academics chose to mark it is perhaps another matter. This review article examines some of the scholarly fruits of Augustus’ 2014 anniversary, encompassing twelve books which were published that year, took it as an explicit prompt or were developed out of bimillennial conferences. They are tackled in three broad groups, the better to bring out the characteristic interests and approaches of each.


2009 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 239-244
Author(s):  
Linda Hogan

AbstractDuncan Forrester is a forefather of the current interest in and debate on public theology. The volume under review here bears witness to the significance of his thought and the range of scholars who are engaged with his work. The contributors to the volume critically examine the legacy of modernity and the direction of future public theology in relation to a variety of specific social and political circumstances. While the passage of time may require a new edition responding to the changing socio-political climate, this volume will remain a valuable resource for all those engaged in public theology.


Author(s):  
Shikha Vats ◽  

W. E. B. Du Bois (1903) had famously said that the problem of the twentieth century “is the problem of the color-line” (p. 13). Dipesh Chakrabarty declares, in this new volume, that the question of the twenty-first century will be that of climate crisis. The major events of the twentieth century, including the processes of imperialism, colonization, and globalization led to widespread migration of people all across the globe framing new intersubjective equations such as oppressor-oppressed, privileged-marginalized, mostly along what Du Bois called ‘the color-line’. The major fallout of this colonial and capitalist project in the last century has been global warming which is set to affect the entire planet and hence needs to be at the forefront of all policy decisions in the twenty-first century. In order to grapple with this new age of the Anthropocene, whereby human beings have become a geophysical force capable of altering the course of the planet, Chakrabarty urges a rethinking and reformulation of the discipline of history


2004 ◽  
Vol 42 (4) ◽  
pp. 1098-1101 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen A Ross

This is a review article of The New Financial Order: Risk in the Twenty-First Century (Princeton University Press 2003) by Robert J. Shiller.


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