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Tracy Coleman
Associate Professor of Religion
(on leave in 2007-08)
Armstrong Hall 141
719-389-6195
tcoleman@ColoradoCollege.edu
Hinduism and South Asian Religions
Women and Gender in Religion
John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Assistant Professor of Religion (2003-05)
Courses
Hinduism, Women in Hinduism and Buddhism, Devi:
Goddesses of India, Bhakti: Devotion in South Asia, Feminist Religious
Thought
Education
Ph.D., Brown University, 2001
M.T.S., Harvard Divinity School, 1993
M.A., Middlebury College (Paris), 1990
B.A., Rockford College, 1988
Research Interests
An innovative study of Hindu bhakti (devotion) in
relation to the established social order, my current book manuscript questions
previous scholarly claims that bhakti empowers women in social
and religious life. Through a close study of bhakti's origins in
classical and early medieval Sanskrit texts, with a focus on the Bhagavata
Purana, this book demonstrates that despite the democratic potential
of various devotional movements in which women are sometimes glorified,
bhakti often functions as a conservative historical process upholding
the traditional patriarchal order. By situating the development of bhakti
within a larger cultural discourse on dharma (truth, duty,
proper behavior), the book explores Krishna's celebrated relationships
with women in contrast to the Buddha's ascetic renunciation of familial
attachments and thus shows how competing conceptions of dharma
were linked to heroic male figures as embodiments of truth and authority
in socio-religious life. The book thereby provides a brief comparative
history of gender and salvation in South Asian religions and thus offers
a new interpretation of bhakti that holds relevance for the study
of religion and social change in other cultures.
Publications
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Agra, India
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