Little Hall, Hamilton, NY 13346, USA

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Phi Beta Kappa Visiting Scholar, Dr. David Haberman (Indiana University, Bloomington) is Professor of religious studies at Indiana and recipient of the Trustees Teaching Award, David Haberman specializes in Hinduism and has spent many years conducting ethnographic and textual research in India. Much of his work, supported by Guggenheim, Fulbright, and ACLS fellowships, is centered on the culture of Braj, an active pilgrimage site in northern India long associated with Krishna. His publications include Acting as a Way of Salvation: A Study of Raganuga Bhakti Sadhana; Journey Through the Twelve Forests: An Encounter with Krishna (recipient, American Academy of Religion Award for Excellence); River of Love in an Age of Pollution: The Yamuna River of Northern India; and People Trees: Worship of Trees in Northern India. His current research involves the relationship of religion, ecology, and nature, with a focus on Hindu attitudes and practices.

Lecture abstract: Defined most simply as the attribution of human characteristics to nonhuman entities, anthropomorphism is a common feature of human experience. Why do humans anthropomorphize? The concept of anthropomorphism has drawn scholarly attention for a long time, but until recently the great majority of this attention has been unreservedly negative. It has been much maligned in many biological disciplines, particularly those that study nonhuman animals; regarded with much suspicion by certain environmentalists who tend to conflate it with anthropocentrism, the notion that human beings are superior to and separate from all other entities; demeaned as childish, primitive practice by colonial anthropologists and scholars of religion; and criticized as an egregious sin or at least wrong-mindedness by certain theologians. These days, however, anthropomorphism is being reconsidered and taken more seriously within a variety of academic disciplines. In addition to reviewing some of these current developments, this lecture explores the function of anthropomorphism in the context of the worship of stones from Mount Govardhan, a sacred hill located in north-central India. Although the entire mountain is considered to be an embodied form of the supreme Hindu god Krishna, the most intimate interaction with it takes place in the devotional worship of individual stones. A key component of this worship involves the intentional anthropomorphic practice of adding a human-like face and other ornamentation to the stones. Slides will be used to illustrate the anthropomorphic adornment of the Govardhan stones.

Parking available on Lally Lane.

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  • Jason Kammerdiener

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