Sravana Borkataky-Varma is a historian and educator. She is the Instructional Professor in the Department of Comparative Cultural Studies at the University of Houston. [1] She is currently a Fellow at the Center for the Study of World Religions at Harvard Divinity School. [2] She has previously taught at Harvard University, the University of North Carolina Wilmington, the University of Montana and Rice University. [3]
Sravana is a historian of South Asian religions specializing in Hindu traditions. She also has a master's degree in Buddhist Studies. Her work is largely centered on the Himalayas (mostly Assam) and West Bengal, India, where she focuses on transmissions of goddess esoteric traditions ( Śākta Tantra) from a variety of lenses, everything from rituals to gender construction and digital religion. [4] She defines her research methodology as "both-and": A blend of social anthropology "from the outside" with elements of reflexive autoethnography "from the inside."
Borkataky-Varma was born in Assam, a state in India. She spent her formative years in the states of Odisha, Uttar Pradesh, and Delhi. She underwent a three-stage initiation into the goddess Kāmākhyā lineage at the age of eight, and then at fifteen, she received the fourth stage of consecration ( abhiṣeka).
Sravana received a bachelor's degree in English Literature and a master's degree in Buddhist Studies at Delhi University in India. She later earned her PhD from the Department of Religion at Rice University. [5]
Borkataky-Varma's academic focus is on esoteric rituals and gender, particularly their role in Hindu traditions. Her scholarship includes books and journal articles on a range of related topics. The following is a selection of some of her most notable work.
Most recently, she co-edited the book "Religious Responses to Pandemics and Crises: Isolation, Survival, and #Covidchaos" [6] with Christian A. Eberhart and Marianne Bjelland Kartzow and the book "Living Folk Religions" [7] with Aaron Michael Ullrey, both of which were published by Routledge in 2023.
In 2022, she explored the world of Śākta Tantra, specifically fertility rituals, with her journal article "From the Fringes to the Center Stage: Hijṛās and Fertility Rituals in Kāmākhyā."
In 2018 she wrote an article for Religions titled "The Dead Speak: A Case Study from the Tiwa Tribe Highlighting the Hybrid World of Śākta Tantra in Assam." [8]
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categories. (June 2023) |
Sravana Borkataky-Varma is a historian and educator. She is the Instructional Professor in the Department of Comparative Cultural Studies at the University of Houston. [1] She is currently a Fellow at the Center for the Study of World Religions at Harvard Divinity School. [2] She has previously taught at Harvard University, the University of North Carolina Wilmington, the University of Montana and Rice University. [3]
Sravana is a historian of South Asian religions specializing in Hindu traditions. She also has a master's degree in Buddhist Studies. Her work is largely centered on the Himalayas (mostly Assam) and West Bengal, India, where she focuses on transmissions of goddess esoteric traditions ( Śākta Tantra) from a variety of lenses, everything from rituals to gender construction and digital religion. [4] She defines her research methodology as "both-and": A blend of social anthropology "from the outside" with elements of reflexive autoethnography "from the inside."
Borkataky-Varma was born in Assam, a state in India. She spent her formative years in the states of Odisha, Uttar Pradesh, and Delhi. She underwent a three-stage initiation into the goddess Kāmākhyā lineage at the age of eight, and then at fifteen, she received the fourth stage of consecration ( abhiṣeka).
Sravana received a bachelor's degree in English Literature and a master's degree in Buddhist Studies at Delhi University in India. She later earned her PhD from the Department of Religion at Rice University. [5]
Borkataky-Varma's academic focus is on esoteric rituals and gender, particularly their role in Hindu traditions. Her scholarship includes books and journal articles on a range of related topics. The following is a selection of some of her most notable work.
Most recently, she co-edited the book "Religious Responses to Pandemics and Crises: Isolation, Survival, and #Covidchaos" [6] with Christian A. Eberhart and Marianne Bjelland Kartzow and the book "Living Folk Religions" [7] with Aaron Michael Ullrey, both of which were published by Routledge in 2023.
In 2022, she explored the world of Śākta Tantra, specifically fertility rituals, with her journal article "From the Fringes to the Center Stage: Hijṛās and Fertility Rituals in Kāmākhyā."
In 2018 she wrote an article for Religions titled "The Dead Speak: A Case Study from the Tiwa Tribe Highlighting the Hybrid World of Śākta Tantra in Assam." [8]
This article needs additional or more specific
categories. (June 2023) |