Current Courses

Fall 2009



Areas of Interest

  • Religion in South Asia
  • Hindu Tantra
  • Sanskrit
  • Yoga Traditions of India
  • History of Indian Science and Medicine
  • Comparative Indo-European Studies
  • Comparative Mythology





  • Books

    Recent Publications:

    David White:
    Sinister Yogis

    WHite: Kiss of the Yogim


    David White:
    Kiss of the Yoginı:” Tantric Sex” in its South Asian Contexts

    White Kiss of the Yogini


    David White:

    The Alchemical Body: Siddha Traditions in Medieval India

    white The Alchemical Body


    David White:

    Tantra in Practice

    White: Tantric in Practice

     




    W
    White, David
    Ph.D., The University of Chicago
    Professor of Religious Studies
    South Asian Religions
    HSSB 3077 | white@religion.ucsb.edu


    Department of Religious Studies
    Santa Barbara, CA 93106
    (PH) email only| (FX) 805-893-2059

    Curriculum Vitae | Courses Taught


    David White Image


     

     

     



    Statement:

      The academic study of South Asian religions, both in India and the West, has generally taken a selection of the textualist traditions of religious elites to be normative for the "great traditions" of Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, Sikhism, and Islam on the subcontinent. Yet, when one observes religion as it has been practiced "on the ground" in India, one finds that it bears little resemblance to these elite traditions. The mythologies and apologetic or propagandistic literature of established sects, religious orders, temples, pilgrimage sites, and interest groups are of very limited used to the scholar who would attempt to piece together a history of South Asian religious practice as it has evolved over time. Far more reliable guides for such historical development are to be found in Indian art, secular literature, epigraphy, and numismatics, as well as colonial and post-colonial ethnographic literature. On the basis of these data sources, one in fact finds that "Tantra" has been the predominant form of religious belief and practice in South Asia since its emergence in the medieval period. Tantric practitioners—the religious specialists known as yogis,siddhas, and viras as well as their various clienteles (kings and courtiers, rural society, members of the urban intelligentsia)—have been prominent actors on the South Asian religious and political scene for well over 1000 years. My research, writing, and teaching continue to focus on delineating the parameters of Tantra as the most perennial and pervasive "great tradition" of South Asia.


    Recent Publications:



    Forthcoming publications:

    • The Yoga Sutras of Patañjali. A Biography (Princeton University Press, 2012
    • Yoga in Practice (Princeton University Press, 2011)
    • “Bhairava,” Brill Encyclopedia of Hinduism (Leiden, 2009).
    • “Yogini,” Brill Encyclopedia of Hinduism (Leiden, 2009).

    Planned Research:

    • the pan-Asian cult of Bhairava, the "horrific" lord of spirits of Hindus, Buddhists, Jains, Sikhs, and Muslims.
    • a revisionist history of South Asian polytheism, in which non-scriptural data sources and “religion on the ground” are highlighted.
    • a historical study of the links between yogini cults in medieval South Asia and Hellenistic and medieval European witchcraft traditions


    Courses Taught:

    Undergraduate:

    • RS 12 Religious Approaches to Death
    • RS 136 Creation Myths
    • RS 160 Religious Traditions in India
    • RS 161D Alchemy, Yoga, and Tantra: Three Paths to Power in Medieval South Asia
    • RS 169 Hindu Devotional Traditions
    • Alchemy (Freshman Seminar)

    Graduate:

    • RS 206: Seminar in South Asian Religious Studies (topics include Hindu Epics, Hindu Tantra, Worship Without Devotion: History of South Asian Polytheism)
    • Readings in Sanskrit: Netra Tantra, Brhannaradiya Purana, Mahabharata, Rasarnavam, Harivamsa, etc.