Monday, March 10, 2014

On Wendy Doniger's 'The Hindus: An alternative History'


Wendy Dongier could almost foresee some disagreement with her views on the history of Hindus. Very early in the book (The Hindus: An Alternative History) she writes:

‘… …Nowadays most non-Hindu scholars of Hinduism strike the familiar religious studies yoga posture of leaning over backward, in their attempt to avoid offense to people they write about. But any academic approach to Hinduism, viewing the subject through the eyes of writers from Marx and Freud to Focault and Edward Said, provides a kind of telescope, the viewfinder of context, to supplement the microscope of the insider’s view, which cannot supply the same sort of context. Always there is bias, and the hope is that the biases of Hindus and non-Hindus will cancel one another out in a well-designed academic study of any aspect of Hinduism… …’

And she goes on to add:

‘So too, in our scholarly approach, we need to consider the history of Hinduism first from a Hindu viewpoint, then from an academic one. …. ….’

Now can you quarrel with that?