Over three sessions Daniela explores Hindu asceticism, featuring the differences among the main ascetic groups and then focusing on their sdhans or spiritual disciplines with close attention to the practice of austerities and the practice of yoga.
Session 1: An introduction to Hindu asceticism providing a historical background of its origin and developments, highlighting differences among the main ascetic groups, especially the aivas and Vaiavas.
Session 2: A discussion about tapas (the inner spiritual fire) developed through tapasys (austerities). We will explore how the notion of tapas developed over the centuries and how it adapted to changing religious and ascetic contexts.
Session 3: Yoga from the ascetic perspective, highlighting the main meditative practices of yoga as well as the role of yoga as a sdhan over the centuries to present day.
Daniela Bevilacqua is a South-Asianist specialising in Hindu asceticism, which she investigates through an ethnographic and historical lens. She received her PhD in Civilizations of Africa and Asia from Sapienza University of Rome and in Anthropology from the University of Paris Nanterre. Her PhD research was published by Routledge under the title Modern Hindu Traditionalism in Contemporary India: The r Mah and the Jagadguru Rmnandcrya in the Evolution of the Rmnand Sampradya. She worked as a post-doc research fellow at SOAS, for the ERC-funded Haha Yoga Project (2015 2020). She has published several articles and book chapters related to asceticism, and yoga studies. She is currently a Research Fellow at SOAS.