Review:
Babb's Understanding Jainism reads like having coffee with a senior scholar deeply knowledgeable about the tradition sharing his first-hand experiences and relating his own individual ways of explaining its finer points... As a textbook, Babb's book may challenge early career undergraduates, but it will delight readers with more ability... Babb's focus on the social realities in which Jainism exists allows us to see Jainism, and Jains, as the complex actors and agents they are, and allows students to move away from questions of how properly "Jain" or not living Jains are, based on how strictly they follow the tenets of the tradition. --Religious Studies Review 44(4)
This short monograph is in the Dunedin Understanding Faith series edited by Frank Whaling, and it provides a fresh, well-structured, clearly written account of Jainism that is appropriate for undergraduate students and interested general readers alike. Babb cleverly weaves together methodological and interpretive issues with the history of the Jains and a sketch of the religion as it is practised in the twenty-first century... To sum up, Babb has written an intelligent book that is a pleasure to read, and deserves a wide readership. --Journal for the Academic Study of Religion
Understanding Jainism fulfils its aims well. The list of further reading points the student to a wide range of resources, and the glossary gives succinct definitions of key terms. Babb writes fluently, his explanations are clear, his language accessible. This is an excellent starting point for those with little or no knowledge of Jainism. This is a worthwhile addition to the shelves of any theological library and for any individual who wish¬es to begin to understand Jainism better. --Interreligious Insight
About the Author:
Dr Lawrence A. Babb is currently Professor of Anthropology and Asian Studies at Amherst College, Massachusetts, where he has spent most of his career. His previous books are."The Divine Hierarchy: Popular Hinduism in Central India "(1975)", Redemptive Encounters: Three Modern Styles in the Hindu Tradition "(1986) and "Absent Lord: Ascetics and Kings in a Jain Ritual Culture "(1996). He has also co-edited "Media and The Trans- formation of Religion in South Asia "(1995) [with Susan S. Wadley] and "Multiple Histories: Culture and Society in the Study of Rajasthan "(2002) [with Michael Meister and Varsha Joshi].
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