How to Cite

Schier, Kerstin: The Goddess’s Embrace: Multifaceted Relations at the Ekāmranātha Temple Festival in Kanchipuram, Heidelberg: Heidelberg Asian Studies Publishing, 2024 (Ethno-Indology: Heidelberg Studies in South Asian Rituals, Volume 15). https://doi.org/10.11588/hasp.1487

Identifiers

ISBN 978-3-98887-011-7 (PDF)

Published

12/10/2024
The print edition was published in 2018 by Harrassowitz Verlag, Wiesbaden. ISBN 978-3-447-11134-8

Authors

Kerstin Schier

The Goddess’s Embrace

Multifaceted Relations at the Ekāmranātha Temple Festival in Kanchipuram

The study by Kerstin Schier examines the big annual festival (mahotsava) at the Ekāmranātha temple in the South Indian town Kanchipuram, which – among other things – dramatises the divine marriage between god Śiva (as Ekāmranātha) and the goddess, generally considered to be Kāmākṣī.

In the course of the festival’s rituals gods and goddesses, temples, and religious traditions relate to each other in many ways. These complex and multifaceted relations are studied by taking into account different types of historical and contemporary sources, and by combining textual analysis with the observation and study of ritual performances, interviews, and oral narratives.

The book provides a detailed description and analysis of the divine marriage’s contemporary ritual practice and its associated myth in Sanskrit and Tamil texts. It also takes into consideration the different views and interpretations of members of local communities, temple priests, donors, and other participants, which leads to a multiplicity of perspectives on the festival.

Kerstin Schier is a religious studies researcher and holds a PhD from the University of Oslo. She specialises in South Indian temple rituals. She now works as a freelance researcher and teacher.

Chapters

Table of Contents
Pages
PDF
Front Matter
i-iv
Contents
v-vi
Acknowledgements
vii
Notes on Transliteration and Translation
ix
Abbreviations
x
Figures and Tables
xi-xiv
Introduction
1-14
1 The Ekāmranātha Temple
15-38
2 The mahotsava at the Ekāmranātha Temple
39-72
3 The 'marriage myth'
73-96
4 Rituals on Paṅkuṉi Uttiram
97-117
5 Three Goddesses
119-152
6 Perspectives on Participation
153-173
7 The Formation of Cultural Memory
175-190
Conclusion
191-194
Appendix
197-199
Bibliography
201-211

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