Āpaḥ, the Sacred Waters
Title | Āpaḥ, the Sacred Waters PDF eBook |
Author | Frans Baartmans |
Publisher | |
Total Pages | 392 |
Release | 1990 |
Genre | Religion |
ISBN |
Sacred Water
Title | Sacred Water PDF eBook |
Author | Nathaniel Altman |
Publisher | Paulist Press |
Total Pages | 304 |
Release | 2002 |
Genre | Religion |
ISBN | 1587680130 |
Drawing from a variety of religious teachings, anthropological evidence and myths and legends from around the world, this book examines how the essential element water plays a vital role in all aspects of our spiritual lives.
Sacred Waters
Title | Sacred Waters PDF eBook |
Author | Celeste Ray |
Publisher | Routledge |
Total Pages | 492 |
Release | 2020-02-18 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 100002508X |
Describing sacred waters and their associated traditions in over thirty countries and across multiple time periods, this book identifies patterns in panhuman hydrolatry. Supplying life’s most basic daily need, freshwater sources were likely the earliest sacred sites, and the first protected and contested resource. Guarded by taboos, rites and supermundane forces, freshwater sources have also been considered thresholds to otherworlds. Often associated also with venerated stones, trees and healing flora, sacred water sources are sites of biocultural diversity. Addressing themes that will shape future water research, this volume examines cultural perceptions of water’s sacrality that can be employed to foster resilient human–environmental relationships in the growing water crises of the twenty-first century. The work combines perspectives from anthropology, archaeology, classics, folklore, geography, geology, history, literature and religious studies.
Sacred Waters
Title | Sacred Waters PDF eBook |
Author | Henry John Drewal |
Publisher | |
Total Pages | 716 |
Release | 2008 |
Genre | Art |
ISBN |
A rich, multifaceted appraisal of Mami Wata and other water deities in Africa and beyond
Water and Society
Title | Water and Society PDF eBook |
Author | Terje Tvedt |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
Total Pages | 304 |
Release | 2015-12-22 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 0857725408 |
Despite the central importance that water has held for civilizations both ancient and modern, its social significance has made surprisingly little impact on our contemporary understanding of human history and development. Dominant interpretations of the relationship between society and nature have remained water blind. In Water and Society historian and leading water expert Terje Tvedt argues for a change that acknowledges the significant role played by water in societal development. Reflecting his expertise as a geographer, historian and a political scientist, and drawing on his wide experience of water issues around the world, Terje Tvedt s Water and Society provides a long overdue reappraisal of the relationship between water and society, one that gives water its rightful place as central to any true understanding of human history and development."
Gender, Water and Development
Title | Gender, Water and Development PDF eBook |
Author | Anne Coles |
Publisher | Routledge |
Total Pages | 256 |
Release | 2020-05-12 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 100018322X |
There is a renewed global commitment to 'water for all'. Yet even though women are usually responsible for domestic water provision, their needs and voices continue to be marginalized in the development process. A close analysis of current policy and practice shows that organizations providing improved water supplies to poor communities typically neglect the gendered nature of access to and control over water resources. The resulting gender bias causes inefficiencies and injustices in water provision and reduces the effectiveness of well-meant efforts. This book shows how, in different environmental, historical and cultural contexts, gender has been an important element in water provision. It draws on a wide range of first-hand material, analyzed from different disciplinary perspectives. Case studies include analysis of the role of water in inhibiting the fight against HIV/AIDS in southern Africa, and the challenges of taking gender into account in large water projects in India and Nepal.
Myths and Places
Title | Myths and Places PDF eBook |
Author | Shonaleeka Kaul |
Publisher | Taylor & Francis |
Total Pages | 220 |
Release | 2023-06-23 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1000897249 |
This volume explores the dialogic relationship between myths and places in the historically, geographically, and culturally diverse context of India. Given its ambiguous relationship with ‘facts’ and empirical reality, myth has suffered an uncertain status in the field of professional history, with the latter’s preference for scientifism over more creative orders of representation. Myths and Places rehabilitates myth, not as history’s primeval ‘Other’, nor as an instrument of socio-religious propagation, but as communitarian mechanisms by which societies made sense of themselves and their world. It argues that myths helped communities fashion their identities and their habitat/habitus, and were fashioned by these in turn. This book explores diverse forms of territorial becoming and belonging in a grassroots approach from across India, studying them in culturally sensitive ways to recover local life-worlds and their self-understanding. Further, challenging the stereotypical bracketing of the mythical with the sacred and the material with the historical, the multidisciplinary essays in the book examine myth in relation to not only religion but other historical phenomena such as ecology, ethnicity, urbanism, mercantilism, migration, politics, tourism, art, philosophy, performance, and the everyday. This book will be of interest to scholars and general readers of Indian history, regional studies, cultural geography, mythology, religious studies, and anthropology.