Yoga in Theory and Practice Unit
We invite proposals on the following topics. Please contact the organizing scholar listed next to each topic for more information (if you feel your work might fit into more than one category, please feel free to contact organizers together):
- Yoga and Sleep - Meera Kachroo (Meera.kachroo@usask.ca)
- Yoga and Esotericism (for possible co-sponsorship with AAR's Esotericism Unit) – Anya Foxen (afoxen@calpoly.edu)
- Yoga as a Site of and Response to Trauma - Amanda Lucia (amanda.lucia@ucr.edu) and Paul Bramadat (bramadat@uvic.ca)
- Yoga and Psychedelics - Patricia Sauthoff (sauthoff@hkbu.edu.hk)
- Yoga in the Dharma Traditions (for possible co-sponsorship with DĀNAM) - Stephanie Corigliano (stephanie@embodiedphilosophy.com)
- New Books in Yoga Studies - Christopher Jain Miller (christopher.miller@arihantainstitute.org)
- Ethics in Yoga – Alba Rodriguez (alba.rodriguezjuan@email.ucr.edu)
We are also open to full-panel proposals on any other topic falling under the purview of Yoga Studies.
This Unit seeks to elucidate the religious and sectarian representations of yoga in South Asian history and the profoundly fascinating contemporary yoga culture that has emerged in the past century. Among other topics that are addressed in our Unit is the emergence of modern yoga out of the encounter between Indian and European cultures in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. In connection with this, it examines the relative pervasiveness of spiritual and religious ideologies in manifest or latent forms within the contemporary yoga scene, and the overarching sociological relevance of yoga within global culture. We also examine changing paradigms with respect to the nature and function of yoga in the larger South Asian religious context. Our goal is to provide a venue in which the body of scholars working in this area can collectively evaluate this extremely timely material. We actively pursue scholars from Europe, Asia, and other areas that have worked at length on these issues, so as to bring an important international component to the Unit.